Mountain Mistletoe Christmas Read online




  Can the magic of the season...

  Bring opposites together?

  Don’t change for a relationship. That’s contractor Nick Bryant’s motto. But when single mom Jen Taylor hires him to renovate her old mansion, he wants to impress her. Nick knows Jen’s focus is her son, and she’ll never want a man who wields a hammer instead of a Harvard degree. But as they prepare her home for Christmas, he can’t help wishing for a moment under the mistletoe!

  “I’m going to be honest with you,” Jen said.

  “Drew is old enough to choose where he lives, and I really don’t want him to choose to live with his dad instead of me.” Tears sparkled in her eyes. She tugged out of his arms and stopped dancing.

  “I’m really sorry,” he said, following her off the dance floor. “I didn’t mean to upset you.”

  “It isn’t that,” she said with a quick shake of her head as they got to the edge. She crossed her arms. “I’m more professional than this, I promise you. But I really need something comfortable by the time my son gets here. I need a home for him, by Christmas. You know?”

  She didn’t want to lose her son in this divorce, either. He could understand that, because it could happen when you weren’t looking.

  Dear Reader,

  There is something enjoyable about writing a woman in her forties, because she’s experienced a lot, learned a lot and has a whole lot more to lose in a failed romance. Sweeping her off her feet is a bigger challenge.

  But she also has a lot to give once the right man earns her heart, and I wanted to show women getting that happily-ever-after with heroes who have just as much life experience and depth of emotion to offer.

  I hope you enjoy the women of the Second Chance Dinner Club! They believe in second chances in life and in love, and there’s always an extra spot at the table.

  If you’d like to connect with me, you can find me on Facebook, Twitter or on my website at patriciajohnsromance.com. I’m always happy to hear from my readers. If you’ve enjoyed this book—take a look at my backlist! There are more stories waiting for you to discover.

  Patricia Johns

  Mountain Mistletoe Christmas

  Patricia Johns

  Patricia Johns writes from Alberta, Canada. She has her Hon. BA in English literature and currently writes for Harlequin’s Heartwarming and Love Inspired lines. You can find her at patriciajohnsromance.com.

  Books by Patricia Johns

  Harlequin Heartwarming

  The Second Chance Club

  Their Mountain Reunion

  Home to Eagle’s Rest

  Her Lawman Protector

  Falling for the Cowboy Dad

  The Lawman’s Baby

  A Baxter’s Redemption

  The Runaway Bride

  A Boy’s Christmas Wish

  Love Inspired

  Montana Twins

  Her Cowboy’s Twin Blessings

  Her Twins’ Cowboy Dad

  A Rancher to Remember

  Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.

  To my husband, my biggest supporter and the love of my life.

  Contents

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  EPILOGUE

  EXCERPT FROM A HERO FOR THE HOLIDAYS BY SYNDI POWELL

  CHAPTER ONE

  WHEN UNCLE STU announced he was gay after thirty-five years of marriage, the entire family had been stunned. In Jen Taylor’s family, Uncle Stu and Aunt Gayle had been pillars of marital success—both with great careers, financial security and the sweetest way of toasting each other from across the room to a successfully served Thanksgiving dinner.

  “Gayle’s the best!” Stu always said, raising his glass. “She’s a real pal. Couldn’t do it all without her.”

  So, looking back on it, there had been...signs. But what woman wanted to face that unless she absolutely had to? Jen could sympathize. Divorce was the most painful experience of Jen’s life so far, too—almost like tearing off a limb. Trying it after thirty-five years of marriage was almost unfathomable.

  But the tragedy for her aunt and uncle was more than just Gayle’s decades of marriage to a man who never truly desired her. It was Stu’s decades of repressing who he really was. Painful as it was for everyone in the family, that divorce was for the best.

  So when her favorite aunt called with a verbal invitation for her second wedding, to a local retired real-estate lawyer named Matthew Pickard, how could Jen not attend? Just because Jen was recovering from her own painful divorce, and her twelve-year-old son was spending Christmas with her ex-husband, didn’t mean she couldn’t be happy for other people. Right? Her therapist had said so, at least, and she’d been repeating that mantra to herself for weeks. Besides, Jen had just moved back to Mountain Springs, Colorado, and she’d recently purchased the old mansion on South Avenue. It wasn’t like she couldn’t make it to the wedding...

  So here she was at Mount Springs Lodge—a lakeside lodge styled like a log cabin that had been redone to some real luxury in the past few years. Jen scanned the name cards. She had been marooned at a corner table with an arguably gorgeous view of the lake, with a bunch of women she didn’t know. Renata Spivovich, Angelina Cunningham, Belle Villeneuve and a couple—Melanie and Logan McTavish. Or siblings? She had no idea. For being so eager to have Jen come to the wedding, Aunt Gayle could have at least put her at a table with family. Jen picked up her name card and glanced across the dining room to where her sister, Lisa, was already chatting with some cousins.

  “Hi.”

  Jen started and sheepishly put the card back when a short, plump woman with a sparkling smile came up beside her. She wore a black sequined dress and her short hair was done in a messy, spiky do that suited her round face.

  “I’m Renata,” the woman said, holding out her hand. “Gayle’s told us all about you.”

  “Has she?” That was strange. “How do you know my aunt?”

  “We have a dinner club,” Renata replied. “She hasn’t told you about us?”

  “I think she mentioned a dinner club.” And her aunt had stuck her with them? Jen was trying not to be insulted here, but...

  “There’s Belle,” Renata said, looking past Jen’s shoulder, and Jen turned to see a lithe, brunette beauty sailing toward them in a formfitting silk sheath. Jen felt positively prepubescent next to her.

  “Hey, girl,” Belle said, leaning down to give Renata a hug; then she turned to Jen. “Are you Jen Taylor?”

  “Yeah—”

  “Great to meet you,” Belle said, and she enclosed her in a perfume-scented hug. “Sorry, I’m a hugger. I wasn’t always, but I like it.”

  Jen stared at her in mute surprise.

  “You okay?” Belle asked with a coaxing smile. “The hug was too much?”

  “No, I’m fine,” Jen chuckled. “Nice to meet you.”

  “Sit, sit,” Renata said, pulling out her chair. “The food is going to be amazing. Angelina was supervising everything—she owns this place, you know.”

  “Oh—” That Angelina Cunningham. Jen should have placed t
he name. Angelina had bought the old hunting lodge and absolutely transformed it, turning it from an old man’s hangout to a trendy tourist hub. Jen’s sister, Lisa, had sent her some articles. This lodge had been covered in several travel magazines, and it had turned into a real hot spot.

  Jen sat down. Any escape after being hugged and chatted up was going to be incredibly rude. Besides, a chance to pick Angelina Cunningham’s brain about renovating an old building would be priceless. Perhaps Aunt Gayle had been looking out for her after all.

  The string quartet was warming up across the room, and people were mingling, talking and laughing, finding their seats. Just then the McTavishes joined them. Definitely a couple. They were smiling and his arm was draped around her shoulder. His tie even matched her midnight blue dress.

  “This is Melanie,” Renata said, nudging Jen’s arm. “And her husband, Logan. They’re pretty newly married themselves. Mel, this is Jen.”

  “Jen?” Melanie raised her eyebrows. “Oh, Jen! Great to meet you.”

  Melanie put her hand out and they shook before the two took their seats.

  Jen was getting the distinct impression that everyone had heard a whole lot about her. Was it her divorce that had garnered all this attention, or what?

  “Good. You’re all here.” Gayle glided up to the table with a sparkling smile. “You’ve all met my niece, then?”

  Gayle had chosen a floor-length lace gown with three-quarter-length sleeves and a bateau neckline. Her silver hair was swept into an updo, and she oozed old Hollywood glamour. She’d told Jen how she’d been nervous about this dress choice, convinced that a second wedding for a woman over sixty should stay “understated,” but Jen had convinced her otherwise. Looking at her aunt now, she was glad she’d managed it.

  “We have met,” Renata replied with an equally brilliant smile of her own. “She’s delightful.”

  “These are my particular friends,” Gayle said, leaning down next to Jen. “They’ve been here for me through some tough times, and I really think you’re going to like them.”

  “The dinner club, right?” Jen said uncertainly, and she leaned closer and lowered her voice. “What about Lisa and my cousins? I kind of expected to be seated with family—”

  “Just meet these women first,” Gayle whispered. “Then go pull a chair up with the family. This wasn’t meant to be an insult, I promise. It’s just that they were all going to be here, and so were you, and I really wanted you to meet them properly—”

  Someone called Gayle’s name and she straightened and smiled as a flash went off. Gayle gave Jen’s arm a squeeze and moved off to another table, leaving Jen with the women, who were looking at her with smiles and undisguised curiosity. Another woman slid into the remaining chair—an elegant, curvy woman with sleek blond hair and an ageless face. She wore crimson lipstick on plump lips and rivaled Belle for model status. Next to them, Jen was feeling just a little bit frumpy in her own knee-length red dress. She pasted on a smile. She’d make the best of this, and then escape to the family table.

  “Is this Jen Taylor?” The blonde woman held out her hand. “I’m Angelina Cunningham.”

  “Pleasure.” Jen shook her hand. “I’m happy to meet you. I understand you redid the lodge.”

  “Well, me and a small army,” Angelina said, brushing off the compliment. “And you’ve purchased that old mansion that went up for sale. I had half a mind to buy it myself.”

  “Glad to have beaten you to it,” Jen said with a chuckle.

  “But getting to the point,” Angelina said. “We understand that you’ve recently gone through a nasty divorce.”

  Jen swallowed and felt the blood drain from her face. “Right.” That was the point? Her divorce? She was doing her best to press forward into her new life. Since when was a woman’s marital status her defining quality?

  “I’m just going to get us some drinks,” Logan said, rising to his feet and slipping away. Melanie didn’t even bat an eye. She leaned forward.

  “I know how this sounds,” Melanie said. “I’m sorry. It’s a bit of an attack, isn’t it?”

  “A bit,” Jen agreed.

  “The thing is, we all know each other because we’ve all been through it. We’ve all had painful divorces and we get together for a dinner club with other women who understand. It’s hard being the divorced one in your group of friends. There’s always some level of judgment, so when we get together, we skip all that.”

  “Get together for dinner,” Jen clarified.

  “Right here,” Angelina said, spreading her hands. “We deserve a nice dinner out with good wine and good conversation. It helps.”

  “Oh...” Jen smiled hesitantly, glancing around the table. “So you’re all divorced, then?”

  “I’m remarried,” Melanie said. “But yes.”

  “And my aunt figured I could use this dinner group, did she?” Jen asked.

  “Girl, we all need this dinner group,” Belle replied. “For me, I was married to my agent. I was modeling at the time, and when I put on a little healthy weight, he replaced me with a younger woman.”

  Jen grimaced. “I’m sorry.”

  “It is what it is,” Belle replied.

  “My husband was cheating on me for some time when he finally confessed,” Renata said. “He asked if he could move his mistress into the family home with our three children and we’d just...stay married.”

  Jen swallowed. “Ouch.”

  “So yeah...divorced,” Renata said, some bitterness in her tone.

  “I don’t blame you,” Jen said.

  “My first husband had been a serial cheater for years,” Melanie added. “I had no idea. When I figured it out, I left him, and everything I’d worked for, behind. It was the hardest thing I ever did. I’m still sorting out my relationship with my ex-stepkids.”

  “And I’m the one who was divorced with no cheating involved,” Angelina added. “It was nearly a decade ago. We had a whirlwind romance, got married and only after the vows did I find out the kind of money he came from. The family didn’t approve, and we didn’t last the year.”

  “I’m sorry...” Jen murmured.

  “We did hear a little bit from your aunt,” Angelina said. “She said you married your prof at college?”

  Whatever. She might as well tell the story. The rest of them had told the worst, hadn’t they?

  “He was my political science professor,” Jen said after a beat of silence. “We were married for fourteen years and we have a twelve-year-old son together.”

  “What went wrong?” Belle asked softly.

  Jen felt tears mist her eyes and she blinked them back. It must be the season and the fact that her son, Drew, was in Denver for the holidays. She was both childless and husbandless this Christmas.

  “I don’t know. We just started fighting more and more. He had all these academic friends, and I only have my master’s degree in art history, so I was trailing behind all those PhDs. He wanted me to be something I couldn’t be, and...there comes a point when being his cute, young student runs its course, you know? I’m neither cute nor young anymore, and I’m not about to pretend otherwise.”

  “You’re beautiful,” Renata replied. “Don’t sell yourself short.”

  “I’m also thirty-eight,” Jen replied.

  The women all nodded at that. They got it, it seemed. Jen was a grown woman, and she wasn’t going to be wide-eyed and in awe of her brilliant husband in the same way she used to be. Besides, Samuel wasn’t exactly as brilliant as he liked people to think.

  “Come to dinner,” Angelina said quietly. “We dress up, we look fantastic and we enjoy each other’s company.”

  It did sound nice. “Thanks. I think I’d like that.”

  Angelina smiled, then leaned forward, elbows on the table and a diamond bracelet glittering in the low light. “Now...what’s the p
lan for that old mansion?”

  Jen could feel herself relaxing now. “I want to turn it into an art gallery. I grew up here, you know, and I’ve loved that house ever since I was a little kid staring at it from the sidewalk. I’m putting everything I got from my divorce into this—but I really think it’ll be amazing. With tourists year-round, and local people who might enjoy some art in their lives...it’s what I wish we had when I was growing up.”

  “It sounds amazing,” Mel said.

  Jen smiled. “I hope so. The house is gorgeous. It has really good bones. The kitchen has servants’ stairs going up from the back, so I can put a wall up blocking off the kitchen so that the rest of the ground floor can be used for the gallery. The first floor is just mammoth. I was thinking the second floor could be used for another showroom and some offices, and the third floor could be our living space. There’s already two bedrooms up there, and a sitting room. And a bathroom, but I’m not sure it’s functional right now. Anyway, my son and I don’t need a lot of space to start. Presumably, once the gallery started supporting itself, I could buy another place to live in and expand the gallery. That might take a little while, though.”

  Jen stopped when she realized she’d been prattling on, the only one talking. Heat hit her cheeks. She tended to talk too much when she was uncomfortable, and she no longer had a surly husband to give her flat stares when she was doing it.

  Logan reappeared just then with a platter of filled punch glasses, and he passed the glasses around with an easy smile.

  “Sounds like you need a contractor,” Angelina said once she’d taken her glass, smiling her thanks at Logan.

  “I do,” she agreed. “Do you have anyone you could recommend for a job this big?”

  “Absolutely. He’s at the wedding tonight, actually.” Angelina straightened and looked out into the crowded room. “Hold on. I’ll be back.”

  The quartet started up just as Angelina left the table, a strings edition of a popular love song.

  “Is Angelina talking about Nick Bryant?” Logan asked his wife.