Zane Waters
carried four bulging bags of groceries through the grocery store parking lot
and loaded them into the backseat of his pickup. Snow was falling harder,
decorating the entire town in a fresh coating of white. Under the glow of the
street lights, Main Street look like a scene Norman Rockwell might have painted.
With the Rockies towering over them, he couldn’t imagine anyplace more
beautiful. Living in the small town of Nugget beat the hell out of surviving in
Denver. After years serving and protecting, he was happy to turn his efforts
toward helping wildlife instead of people. He didn’t take nearly as much crap
from the deer.
He climbed into
the truck cab and slammed the door, then started the engine and pulled out of
the lot. After a month on his new job spent mostly alone out in the mountains,
he was ready for some human interaction…preferably with someone soft who
smelled good.
An image of the
redhead from the flower shop materialized. He wasn’t sure how she smelled,
since the whole shop had reminded him of his grandma’s rose garden, but she’d
certainly looked soft. All that beautiful red hair had slid over her curved
cheek and long neck when she flicked it back, and he’d itched to bury his
fingers in the thick mass. Every now and then a flare of heat in her blue eyes made
him think she might be interested, too. But hitting on one woman while he was
buying a corsage for another had seemed like bad form. He just hoped Joanie’s
friend was half as pretty.
Zane slowed to a
stop at the only stoplight in town and tapped his fingers on the steering
wheel.
Despite his
cousin’s assurance his date was hot, he had his doubts. The fact that she was
alone on Christmas Eve and willing to go out with a perfect stranger must mean
something…but then, the same was true of him. At this point, he’d be content
with a woman who was good company. Funny would be an added bonus. The redhead
had made him smile more than once.
When the light
changed, he cruised down the street, easily navigating the slippery pavement.
The conditions worsened as he left the downtown area behind and turned into the
sparsely populated neighborhood where he’d rented a house. Apparently, the
plows hadn’t been out this far yet. Up ahead, something pink caught in the beam
of his headlights, and he took his foot off the gas.
The Flower Power
van was pointed nose-first into a snowbank. The redheaded owner of the shop
stood on the street with her hands on her hips. Even through the closed window
of his truck, he could hear her swearing. A grin formed. Maybe she wasn’t as
sweet and innocent as she looked.
He rolled to a
stop some distance behind the van and turned off his engine but left his lights
on. When she spun around and met his gaze through the windshield, her eyes
widened.
Zane got out and
slammed the door. “Need some help?” Stupid
question.
Apparently, she
thought so, too. She waved a hand toward the dark bulk of the mountains. “No, I
thought I’d set up camp out here and wait for the moon to rise.”
He laughed out
loud. “Let me rephrase that. I’m here to help. I have a shovel in the back of
my truck and kitty litter. We’ll have your van free in no time.”
“God, I love a man
who’s prepared. Sorry for being sarcastic, but this day couldn’t get any worse.
No, I take that back. It probably will get worse, but I’d be eternally grateful
if you’d help me out.”
“One good turn
deserves another. That’s how karma works, and you certainly went above and
beyond for me.”
“Speaking of
which…shouldn’t you be at home getting ready for your date right now?”
“I’m on my way. I
bought a week’s worth of groceries after I left your shop, so let’s get you
unstuck before my ice cream melts.”
“At the moment, the
whole world seems to be on ice.” She blew on her hands. “In fact, my guess is
hell just froze over.”
“Good point.” He
reached into the bed of his truck and pulled out a shovel. It looks like you
skidded over a good-sized hump of snow, which is probably why you can’t get any
traction to back up. I’ll shovel it out, and you can give it another try.”
“Thank you. The only
good news is I don’t think I dented my van. The snowbank was pretty soft where
I hit it.”
He scraped
hard-packed snow away from the front tire and then rounded the back of the van
to work on the second one. “It’s deeper over here. Just a heads-up, your tires
don’t have much tread left.”
“I have an
appointment to replace them next week. My bad for putting it off for so long.”
Bending low, he
worked to dig out the icy snow. When he backed up, he bumped into her. “Oops,
sorry.” He turned and slid an arm around her when she swayed. “I didn’t know
you were behind me.”
She definitely
smelled good, but not like flowers. Vanilla. He took an extra moment to enjoy
the scent and feel of her, despite her bulky jacket, before he stepped back.
Her cheeks were
pink when she met his gaze. “I was going to offer to get the kitty litter.”
“I’ll grab it. The
bag is heavy.” He grunted as he lifted the sack out of his truck, then pulled a
pocket knife from his jeans to slit open the bag. “I haven’t had to use any yet
this winter, but with all the off-road driving I do, I’m sure this won’t be the
last time.” Once he’d sprinkled litter behind both of her front tires, he
returned the bag to his truck and smiled at her. “That should do the trick.”
“Thank you so much
for stopping.”
He stuck his hands
in the pockets of his down jacket. “Can’t leave a lady in distress by the side
of the road.” What he wanted to do was reach out and touch her rosy cheek with
his warm palm. “Well, I could, but I was raised better.”
“Your parents
would be proud. Tell you what. Next time you need flowers for your girlfriend,
they’re on the house.”
“I don’t…” He
broke off. It really was cold out, and she looked like she was freezing. She
didn’t need to stand around shivering while he confessed his date was actually someone
his cousin’s wife had scrounged up. “Sounds good. See if you can back up now.
I’ll wait to make sure you’re okay before I go.”
“Thanks again. One
more delivery before I can head home.” She pulled out her phone and glanced at
it. “Damn. I’m going to be so late,”
she moaned. “I’m out of here.”
He waited beside
his pickup while she got in her van and started the engine. The taillights
flashed on, and the tires skidded a little before catching hold. She backed
slowly then rolled down the window and gave him a thumbs-up.
“Have a nice time
tonight,” he called.
“You, too. Just so
you know. Whoever your date is, she’s a lucky girl.”
He stood on the
street without moving as her van disappeared into the darkness. His date wouldn’t
be lucky at all. He had a feeling he was going to spend the entire evening
thinking about the blue-eyed beauty who’d just driven away.
* * *
*
14 comments:
Nice wrap up. Can’t wait to see what tomorrow brings. Hope they each have fun on their respective dates. **wink wink**
Gotta have an HEA for a Christmas story, right?
Perfect setting for Christmas along with the reality that Norman Rockwell scenes also have you skidding into a ditch :-) Nice work on both characters, Jannine.
Been there, done that with the ditch! Thanks, Rolynn.
You gotta love a knight in shining armor who comes bearing kitty litter!
Those knights have to be prepared! LOL
What Alison said. LOL Maybe he was once an Eagle Scout. Love this story so far. I'll hate for it to end.
It's hard cutting loose our characters after such a short time, Vonnie. I keep meaning to expand these stories into novellas to publish one Christmas, but there aren't enough hours in the day!
Oh my gosh, love this! Both characters are so well-drawn and relatable. The emotion and setting are making me feel like I'm in the story with them. Looking forward to seeing how these two mesh 'if' they meet again, ;)
Oh, yes, and I love the humor too. Made me smile. :)
So much fun. Enjoyed. Can't wait for the finale.
If you smiled, Ally, my job here is done!
Stay tuned for the HEA, Brenda!
I'm smiling, too...despite that fact that you've put "us" in a pile of snow! I love this line: "In fact, my guess is hell just froze over.” :-)
Leah, we need a little of that snow!
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