She'd never seen a Santa suit used
in quite that way.
Jillian Mayberry leaned against the
steering wheel of her Mini Cooper and squinted through the swirling snow outside
the windshield. Her eyes weren’t playing tricks on her. That really was a bright
red Santa suit flapping like a flag in the wind from the pole in front of the
old log cabin. A lighted sign above the door spelled out Santa’s Workshop in hand-carved red letters. Thank heaven, she’d
found it. She wasn’t sure she could drive another mile in this storm.
That morning she’d left St. Paul
under a cold, bright sun, but by the time she’d reached Duluth a light snow had
started to fall. Now, a few miles up the north shore of Lake Superior past Two
Harbors, it looked like an army of snow giants were having a pillow fight—and the
pillows were losing. The fat flakes were so close together she could barely see
the log building ahead. She inched forward a few feet and stopped the Mini next
to a big brown SUV with a Department of Natural Resources insignia on the
door.
She flipped up the hood of her puffy
down coat and reached for the briefcase on the seat beside her. Leave it to
Alan, Jr. to dump this chore on her before hopping a jet for a skiing holiday
in Aspen with his new girlfriend. It was only one of the many perks of being
the son of the founder of the most prestigious private family office firm in
St. Paul, which catered to the legal and financial needs of some of the
wealthiest families in the state. As the most junior member of the firm (and
Alan, Jr.’s former girlfriend), Jillian
was low woman on the totem pole, so this last minute task had naturally fallen
to her two days before Christmas.
Oh, well. It didn’t really matter,
since she wasn’t going home for the holidays anyway. She’d been feeling sorry
for herself ever since her mother had announced her plans to spend Christmas in
St. Tropez with her latest flame, Ricardo. Jillian huffed out a sigh, and a
cloud of vapor fogged the windshield. She should be impervious to being hurt by
her mother after all these years, but somehow she wasn’t.
She glanced at the log cabin again
through the thickening snow. At least this was a simple assignment; she just
had to get a couple of papers signed. With any luck she would be in, out, and on
her way within a few minutes—which was a good thing. The highway was already
heavily snow-packed, and she worried about making it back to the shelter of the
motel room she’d booked in Two Harbors.
When she stepped out of the car, a
gust of wind snatched the door from her hand and slammed it shut. She was so
startled she lost her footing and sat down hard in a knee-deep pile of snow. Muttering
under her breath, she struggled to her feet. Whatever had possessed her to
leave Virginia for this god-forsaken icebox? Oh, yes. The lure of a well-paying
job at Saperman, Ellis, and Saperman and those pesky student loans.
Her socialite mother had considered
law school a waste of time and money, so Jillian had cobbled together the funds
to pay her own way. At the moment, with her nose running and fingers and toes
numb, she wondered whether she should have caved and gone the debutante route. Then
she thought of the requisite small talk with silly, overdressed people at endless
rounds of parties and decided freezing to death was preferable. It hadn’t been
easy, but she’d scrimped and saved every penny during the past five years to
pay off the last of her loans. Only one more payment and she could tell
Saperman, Ellis, and Saperman—specifically Alan, Jr.—what they could do with their
job.
And
go where? Do what?
With no ready answer, she picked up
her fallen briefcase, sighed, and trudged through the growing drifts to the
door.
Up close, the cabin appeared to be at
least eighty years old with dark, hand-hewn beams and wide white chinking. Warm
light beckoned from a pair of curtained windows flanking the rustic, planked
door. Jillian raised a gloved hand to the big knocker carved in the shape of a
grinning Santa and brought it down with a resounding thud. Teeth chattering,
she counted the seconds until the door swung open and Paul Bunyan peered down
at her. Okay, so maybe he was Paul Bunyan’s beardless, blonder, cuter brother, and
wearing a dark green ranger’s uniform with a patch on the shoulder that read
Gooseberry Falls State Park instead of plaid flannel and denim, but he was mighty
impressive all the same.
His brows drew together in a
formidable frown. “What kind of fool goes shopping in weather like this? You’d
better come in.” The giant grabbed her arm and pulled her through the door into
a warm, gingerbread-scented Christmas wonderland.
The cabin might have started life as
a humble pioneer homestead, but now it housed a mind-boggling array of Yuletide
décor—a veritable explosion of red and white. Jillian blinked twice, trying to
take it all in. Against one wall a fire crackled in a fireplace of rounded
river rocks. Shelves lined the other walls, and a couple of tables and chairs peeked
through the holiday mayhem. Every inch was filled with carved wooden Santas,
red and white painted bird ornaments, and ribbon-wrapped animals and wreaths
fashioned from straw. In the middle of it all stood a floor-to-ceiling Christmas
tree, twinkling with tiny white lights and covered with wooden ornaments in the
shapes of animals, toys, and elves in pointed red hats.
“Wow.” The word slipped out under
her breath. She’d never seen anything like Santa’s
Workshop in her life. Her minimalist, modern art-loving mother would have fainted
if confronted by such colorful confusion. To Jillian, it was magic.
“It’s something, all right. My
grandpa made most of them.”
She’d almost forgotten the giant.
She had also almost forgotten her mission. She flipped back her hood and pulled
off her gloves, stuffing them in the pockets of her coat. Pasting a smile on
her face, she stuck out her hand. “I’m not a customer. I’m Jillian Mayberry,
from Saperman, Ellis, and Saperman.”
His big, warm hand engulfed hers, even
as his brows drew together in a confused frown. “Erik Gustafsson.”
Gustafsson. Good. He was the man
she’d come to see. He also had eyes the color of a fjord in summer.
Where
on earth did that come from?
She’d never been prone to poetic flights
of fancy. She gave her head a tiny shake to rid it of such nonsense.
But
he’s so tall, and strong, and blond. Like a Viking warrior, but with better
hair and minus all the scars.
Stop
that, you moron! You’ve got a job to do—do it.
With reluctance, she withdrew her
hand and nodded. “Mr. Gustafsson, I’ve brought you some papers on behalf of our
client, Ronald Oglethorpe.”
Suspicion
entered Erik’s gaze. “What kind of papers.
Jillian fumbled in her
briefcase, pulled out a folder, and handed it to him.He read the first page, and a muscle in his jaw flexed. He turned to her with a scowl. “This is an eviction notice.”
20 comments:
Love your visual of snow giants having a pillow fight. Poor Jillian. Already she's toast!
Great start, Alison! lol not the best of circumstances to meet under. I love it!
Thanks, Margo. I don't mind thinking about snow now that I don't have to live with it. LOL
She is in a pickle, Donna. I'm glad you liked it.
Oh, oh. Trouble in Santa's paradise. Can't wait to see where this goes!
Loved this start! Reading about snow always makes me feel Christmassy, and when there's a hunk involved that's even better.
What a wonderful start to the story! I love the North Shore and these visuals were perfect! Can't wait to read the whole thing--well done, Alison!
Can hardly wait for the next chapter!
Trouble indeed, Jannine!
Christina, thanks so much for stopping by! I moved from Minnesota to California last year and am feeling a bit nostalgic about the snow. This will be our first green Christmas.
Thanks, Liz! I love the North Shore, too. Gooseberry Falls State Park is one of my all-time favorite places.
Barbara, you can be sure there'll be more trouble tomorrow! LOL
LOVE this! SO vivid and Christmasy. And, what a cliffhanger...uh oh, can we say conflict? Can't wait to read more.
This is a great story, Alison! Love how you ended this except too.
Alicia, nothing says Christmas like a good old-fashioned snowstorm (and a Grinchy lawyer, right? LOL).
I'm glad you liked it, Tammy. Come back tomorrow for more twists and turns.
A Viking-esque hero? Yum! Great first chapter!
Alison, as a Scandinavian and a lover of BIG Christmases and snapping fires in the fireplace, I'm into this story, big time. Looking forward to tomorrow.
Christine, when I moved to Minnesota 25 years ago the men ALL looked like Vikings to me. I've never felt so short! They make great heroes.
Rolynn, I don't think there's anything more Christmassy than a Scandinavian Christmas, do you?
Alison, great beginning. Looking forward to the rest of the story.
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