“An eviction notice? Let me see that.” Jillian
snatched the papers from Erik’s hand. Lawyers didn’t serve eviction notices.
They left that unpleasant duty to the sheriff’s office. Surely Alan, Jr. hadn’t
sent her on such a fool’s errand. She could kick herself for not reading the
contents of the folder before she left. She’d been annoyed and in a hurry to
beat the storm, but neither was an acceptable excuse for allowing herself to be
caught unprepared.
She scanned the first page. “It’s
not an eviction notice. Technically, it’s a notice exercising the termination
provision in your lease.”
Erik crossed his arms across the
breadth of his chest. “I don’t think so.”
She sighed and silently cursed Alan,
Jr. “There’s no need to make this more difficult than necessary. It’s a straightforward
legal document. If you’ll sign next to the arrows, I can be on my way.”
His expression remained implacable.
“You’ve got the wrong man.”
“You are Mr. Gustafsson, aren’t
you?”
“Yes.”
“And you currently rent this
property?”
“No.”
She knit her brows, echoing his
frown. “I don’t understand.”
“I told you you’ve got the wrong man.”
Frustration poked a chink in her
professional armor. “I need to speak to the lessee of this property, whoever it
is.” The termination might be an unpleasant legal action, but it was legal. If this
man thought he could make it disappear by intimidating her, he was mistaken.
Erik stared at her for a long
moment, as if weighing his options. Then he turned his head and called out over
his shoulder, “Farfar, you have a
visitor!”
Jillian leaned and peered around
him. When a figure emerged from the back room, her mouth fell open and the
folder slipped from her fingers, sending papers wafting to the floor.
Holy,
moly. It was Santa
Claus. That rat, Alan, Jr., had sent her to evict Santa Claus two days before
Christmas.
“Ms. Mayberry, this is my
grandfather, Gustav Gustafsson.”
Santa smiled and took her hand.
“Please call me Gus.”
Except for his customary red suit
(which was apparently flapping from the flagpole out front), he looked exactly
like the illustrations in her cherished childhood copy of The Night Before Christmas. Same rosy cheeks; same bushy, white
beard; same little, round belly (well, maybe not so little).
The surrealism of the moment hit
home. She was shaking hands with Santa Claus.
“Farfar,
Ms. Mayberry is here to kick you out.”
Gus gave her a cherubic smile. “I’m
sure that’s not true.”
Jillian swallowed hard. How could
she do this? But how could she not? It was her job. She bent down, scooped up
the papers from the floor, and stuffed them back in the folder. “I’m afraid the
owner of this property has decided to invoke the termination provision of your
lease. I need you to sign these papers.”
A look of confusion crossed Gus’s
face. “Even though Sam Oglethorpe passed away last month, I can’t believe he would
let that happen. We grew up together.”
At the waver in his voice, Jillian
clenched her teeth. If Santa started to cry, she was going to murder Alan, Jr.
the minute he got back in the office.
Erik placed his hand on his
grandfather’s shoulder and gave it a small squeeze. Gus sniffled and blinked a
couple of times before regaining his composure. “I don’t understand. Sam always
said this place was mine as long as I wanted it.”
She frowned and opened the folder to
check the documents. “These papers indicate the owner is a Ronald Oglethorpe.”
“That’s Ronnie, Sam’s son. There
must be some mistake. I’m sure you’ll figure it out.” Gus pulled out a big red
handkerchief, blew his nose, and gave her a watery smile.
Alan,
Jr., you’re a dead man walking.
Jillian glanced at her watch. It was
after 6:00p.m. No one would be in the office this late on December 23rd, and
Alan, Jr. was still in the air on his way to Aspen. “I’ll do what I can to get
more information, but I’m afraid it will have to wait until tomorrow.”
Gus’s smile blossomed. “I’m a pretty
good judge of character, and I have complete faith in you.”
She wished she shared his
confidence. He seemed like such a sweet man. If there was a way out of this
mess for him she would find it, but even a good lawyer couldn’t work miracles.
Gus patted his belly. “Now that we’ve
put that worry behind us, I’m hungry. I’ve got a pot of potato soup on the
stove and homemade gingerbread in the oven. Take off your coat, and we’ll eat.”
For a moment she was tempted. The
cabin was warm and cozy, and mouth-watering smells emanated from the kitchen. Besides,
who wouldn’t want to eat dinner with Santa? But the Mini Cooper wasn’t a very
big car, and if she stayed much longer, she might end up stranded. She
retrieved her gloves from her pockets and started to pull them on. “That’s a lovely
invitation, but the weather is horrible, and I need to get back to Two Harbors
while I can.”
Erik crossed to the front window and
flicked back the curtain. Clumps of thick white flakes tumbled down like puffs
of cotton candy. “I wouldn’t count on it tonight unless you drove here in a
snowplow.”
She rushed to the window and shoved
the curtain aside. The flagpole had disappeared behind a veil of white. Her nerves
tightened. “I can’t even see my car.”
Gus poked his head around her
shoulder. “All the more reason to join us for dinner. If the storm passes by
the time we finish, Erik can dig your car out and follow you into town to be
sure you make it. If it’s still snowing, you can both stay here. There’s plenty
of room.”
Sleep here? With Santa and the
Viking? That would make some story for
her grandchildren (if she ever had any), but it was out of the question. “Oh,
no, I couldn’t.”
Erik stepped back from the window. “Well,
you’re not going anywhere right now, so you might as well eat.”
He was right. She had no other
option. The least she could do was be gracious. She tucked her hand into Gus’s
elbow and smiled. “In that case, I’d be delighted.”
They walked through a smaller room, also
chockfull of Christmas decorations, and into a cheery, old-fashioned
kitchen. Gus seated Jillian at a sturdy
pine table, then joined her while Erik dished up steaming bowls of dilled
potato soup and added wedges of chewy pumpernickel bread.
As they ate and talked, night
settled on the cabin. The soup was fabulous, delicate and hearty at the same
time. When her spoon clinked against the bottom of the bowl, Gus laughed and
declared her an honorary Swede. To her surprise, Jillian found herself spilling
the story of her life, up to and including the humiliation of finding Alan, Jr.
in the coatroom of the fanciest restaurant in St. Paul draped all over
Brunhilde the Berserker (aka the assistant coach of the U of M women’s
volleyball team).
When she finished, Gus took her
hand. “I hope you gave that fellow the old heave-ho. You’re much too good for a
knucklehead like that.”
She wondered if she could adopt Gus
as a grandfather. Her own mother had berated her for letting such a “good
catch” slip away.
By the time Erik served the
gingerbread with lemon sauce, even he seemed to have decided she was no longer Simon
Legree’s henchwoman. His blue gaze warmed when it touched her, and his knee
brushed hers under the table more than once. When he rose to clear the table,
she jumped up to help.
Hands full, he shook his head. “Go
check the weather.”
The thought of leaving the cozy
cabin to drive to a motel sent a shiver through her body, but if the snow had
stopped she had no excuse to stay. When she pulled back the curtain and saw the
swirling flakes, her selfish internal voice cheered. “It’s still snowing, and
the wind’s picked up,” she called out.
“Give me your keys.”
She jumped and spun around at the
sound of Erik’s deep voice behind her.
A half-smile played around
his lips, accentuating the sexy masculine dimple on one side. “I’ll get your
bag and show you to the spare room.”
12 comments:
Let it snow! Can't wait for tomorrow. ;-)
Oh, baby, it's cold outside! Love the trapped in a snowstorm angle. My fave!
Evict Santa? Sacrilege! This is great, Alison.
Stranded in such a good way. Nice, Alison!
Thanks, Margo. Lots of fun still ahead!
Chris, I've always loved the "trapped in a snowstorm" angle, too. It's not as scary as a hurricane or volcanic explosion. Lots of opportunity for warm fuzzies.
Exactly, Jannine!
Rolynn, they're making the most of it!
Love the twist. Evicting Santa? How could she???
Exactly, Diane!
Crawled out of my writing cave to catch up. Sorry I'm late! Love Santa and the Viking! hehe
Can't wait to go read the next installment!
Can't believe I fell behind again. LOVE it! Evicting Santa???? Great twist. :)
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