Keeping her focus on the ground, she shoved all of the backpacks into a corner and tried to come up with a plan. One that didn’t include Isabel finding her with Randolph.
“Merry Christmas one and all,” Randolph greeted.
“They’re dummies. They aren’t real, so shush before someone hears you,” Regan hissed at the ceramic-and-plastic statue with the glittery red nose. She could swear that his smile grew a little wider.
Setting Randolph in the far corner of the closet, Regan piled all of the CPR dolls against him, careful not to damage his sheen. Once he was securely hidden, she reminded him to be quiet, clicked off the light, and left the room—only to come face to face with a very winded, very wet, and very pissed Isabel Stark.
The janitor was apologizing profusely about how she was just mopping up the south hall, doing her job, didn’t see Isabel in time, and hoped that the mop handle wouldn’t leave a bruise on her beautiful forehead.
Isabel, however, didn’t miss the look passing between Regan and the woman, nor did she miss Regan coming out of the closet. The closet which Regan plastered her body against.
“Stop touching me,” Isabel harped, batting away the other woman’s hands. She marched over to Regan, took in the business suit, and glared. “It’s too late, you know. The board already hates you. So it doesn’t matter that Holly got the lead.”
“Holly got the lead?” Regan whispered, and no matter how hard she tried to be angry, her heart warmed and a smile broke across her face.
Her baby had done it. Set her mind on something, practiced hard, and got her dream part. No matter what happened in that meeting, how bad Isabel tried to make Regan look, Holly was going to play Christmas Kitty.
“Not for long. Every parent has to volunteer, as stated in the bylaws. And you”—Isabel poked her in the chest—“didn’t do your fair share. I am sure the council will see it that way and then Lauren, who is the understudy, will get to play Christmas Kitty.”
“Actually, Isabel,” Regan began, trying to remember what ChiChi had told her, “I have met with my committee and the costumes are coming along wonderfully. In fact, we decided to take a
Jesus Christ, Superstar
–meets–Cirque Du Soleil approach to their design. I’m sure the council will just love our ideas. It’s very New Age meets traditional.”
Isabel’s mouth fell open and Regan patted herself on the back for that last part. The costumes, just like the direction she hoped the council would embrace, merged the new with the traditional.
Isabel didn’t have a snarky comeback. In fact, she stood so silent that Regan was about to leave. Convinced Isabel would need time to strategize on how best to next screw with the Martin women, and remembering that ChiChi was waiting in the parking lot, she eased off the door. She had taken only three steps when Isabel pounced.
Shoving Regan aside, Isabel yanked open the door, flicked on the light, and didn’t even let out so much as a gasp.
“
Es el diablo
,” the janitor whispered, jerking a chin toward Isabel.
“What are you hiding?” Isabel said, her eyes scanning the room. “You came in here with a big box and now you only have your purse.”
“Tampons,” the heavy accent cut through the air.
Isabel looked from one to the other. The janitor folded her arms in front of her and glared as if daring Isabel to call her a liar.
With a huff and one final scan, Isabel slammed the door. A very muffled “Merry Christmas one and all” sounded through the wood.
Regan closed her eyes and banged her head against the wall as Isabel yanked open the door again and riffled through all of the bodies to come up with the only one that mattered. The one with the bright red nose and big smile. And the one that was going to ruin everything.
“I knew it!” Isabel cheered. “I knew you had to have something to do with ChiChi’s car and the Christmas display. Wait until the board hears about this. Those old biddies’ savior is none other than the person who single-handedly tried to steal Christmas.”
Regan grabbed Randolph. “I will tell them.”
“Tell us what, dear?”
Regan couldn’t answer, because when she turned around about thirty sets of eyes, all alive and all members of the town council, greeted her with strained smiles. Then they saw Randolph and the smiles fled, leaving only strain.
“Yeah, tell them, Regan,” Isabel prodded.
“You found Randolph!” ChiChi screeched, waddling up to lay a loving pat on the reindeer’s head.
“Is that true?” a thin man with thin limbs and an even thinner head of hair asked. Benson was not only head of the town council, he was also the former high school principal and known for sniffing out BS. Which probably explained why his nostrils started flaring the second Regan opened her mouth.
“I was waiting at my car for ChiChi,” Regan said, the woman in question beaming up at her with all the faith in the world. Regan swallowed. “We were supposed to go over the costumes and material choices for the Christmas musical before the meeting, and I spotted a building out in the field—”
“The utility closet by the old oak tree?” Jordan said, stepping forward and making Regan relax a little. Jordan stood beside Regan, placing one hand on Randolph and the other on Regan’s shoulder. It was a silent declaration of alliance. One that wasn’t missed by anyone in the crowd, especially Isabel, whose upper lip twitched.
“Is that where you found Randolph?” Selma, one of the councilwomen, asked.
“Uh, he was wrapped in this tablecloth,” Regan went on, neither admitting nor denying that she had indeed
found
Randolph.
“Clearly whoever took him wanted to make sure he didn’t get damaged,” Regan reasoned. “I mean, why else would they wrap him up so carefully? In fact, I bet it was all some ridiculous mistake, and even though they wanted to return him, it went public so fast they probably were too scared.”
“You know what, you’re right,” Mrs. Moberly, the council secretary and town librarian, said, pushing her glasses farther back on her nose and coming forward to pet Randolph’s tail. “I bet they read about the Randolph sanctuary clause on the website you built. They probably thought they could return him anonymously and avoid criminal charges.”
“Ingenious idea,” Benson said, smiling down at the deer.
“Actually,” Regan said, gesturing to her Mrs. Clauses, “it was these ladies here who rallied together, brought in the
sheriff’s department, and got the news of Randolph out to the public. It was done with the same hard work and passion as they devote to the Community Action Committee.”
“Are you all actually buying this?” Isabel spat.
Regan had almost forgotten she was there. By the way a few council members jumped at her shrill voice, she wasn’t the only one. Maybe it was because as nearly every council member had made their way forward to pet Randolph, Isabel had been shoved to the back.
“You all really believe that someone
stole
Randolph, then returned him, wrapped in a blanket—”
“Tablecloth,” ChiChi corrected.
“Whatever,” Isabel snapped, her forehead growing with every heated breath she took. “The point is, there is no way that someone could have hidden him in broad daylight and not a single one of us saw him.”
“But Regan saw him,” Mrs. Moberly corrected, annoyance fogging up her glasses.
“Are you all really this blind?” Isabel flung her hands against her thighs.
All
of town hall stood silent—the uncomfortable kind of silence with everyone staring back and forth between Regan and Isabel. Regan held her breath. Isabel crossed her arms. No one spoke. Not even the janitor, who was polishing Randolph’s hooves.
Should she just come clean, tell the council the entire story and hope that they didn’t punish Holly for Regan’s mistake?
God, maybe Gabe was right. Maybe she had some deep-seated anger issues left over from Richard and they made her act like a crazy woman. Because who would throw eight
innocent reindeer through the window of an SUV and then abscond with their leader?
“Can’t you all see what this is?” Isabel’s tone implied that anyone who didn’t was a fool.
“Of course, we see,” ChiChi said, wagging her head as if greatly disappointed...in Isabel. “It’s a Christmas miracle, dear.”
And on cue, Randolph blinked his nose and said, “Merry Christmas, one and all.”
Because it was a day ending in
Y
, Gabe had rolled out of bed at dawn. He’d taken a cold shower, eaten leftover chow mein out of the box—also cold—and headed to the office. Before he could even address the Everest-size pile of paperwork, his phone had started ringing, then his in-box lit up, and by the time he remembered Jordan was coming in late, he’d accomplished jackshit.
Unless he counted dispatching all of the Safe Return of Randolph calls. Apparently, ChiChi had put his number and e-mail address on all the posters.
Was this what Jordan dealt with every morning? He needed to either get his family to handle their own shit or give Jordan a raise.
The phone rang.
Maybe both.
Needing some fresh air and space that didn’t give him a migraine, Gabe took a walk through DeLuca Manor. The former carriage house, originally built by his great-grandfather in the late eighteen hundreds, had been renovated into a
modern masterpiece of architecture and finishing. Situated on the back of a vast expanse of lawn and surrounded by heritage oaks, the stone-and-mortar-faced building, with its domed cathedral ceilings and pair of antique six-hundred-lamp chandeliers, had become one of the most photographed and recognized buildings in the Valley. It also contained one of the last memories Gabe had of his father before he passed.
Gabe walked through the massive wooden doors, and even the addition of the hundred dressed tables and thousands of lilies for tonight’s event couldn’t overpower the scent of redwood floors and oak barrels. Even the smell reminded him of his old man; of the way his father had tried to appear supportive when Gabe had confessed that he wanted to go to art school instead of run the winery.
His shoes echoed off the walls as he made his way through the main hall and to the small set of stairs hidden behind rows of oak barrels. He took the stairs two at a time and breathed in the crisp morning air as he gazed out over the rolling acres of vines.
His father used to bring him up here to talk about the day and slip him a little scotch from the flask he kept hidden in his breast pocket. The one he’d kept a secret from his wife, which she had dutifully washed and refilled weekly.
His father had shown his love for his wife in everything that he did. His mother had put up with all of his father’s crazy ideas about cross-pollination and cross-breeding different species of grapes, loving the way he would lose himself for hours in the field. And in turn they had both loved their children fiercely. Right up until the day they died.
Too bad his dad hadn’t left detailed instructions about how he wanted Gabe to raise his siblings as he had with the
business. Or how to successfully blend two families who were both too bold and too stubborn on their own. Not that Gabe was thinking of blending two families anytime soon, but if these last few weeks were an indicator of how the rest of his life would go, he needed to figure out a way to untangle his own happiness from being dependent on his siblings’.
His cell rang. It was Marc. Again. All of his brothers had called at least once, and it wasn’t even lunchtime. Gabe sent the call to voice mail. He didn’t want to talk about Regan or Richard or what he had or hadn’t found out.
Which was pretty much nothing.
A drop of water landed on his arm. He looked up at the darkening sky and watched as the storm rolled in. Rather than fight it, only to get back to a life that was smothering him, he decided to wait it out.
He moved away from the rail and walked under the overhang of the balcony. Feeling suddenly weary, he dusted off his dad’s seat, leaned back, and closed his eyes. The rain tapped against the ceramic tiles of the roof, picking up in speed and volume.
He was tired and worn out, and he really should have stayed in bed.
It took him several minutes and multiple shifts to get comfortable. He tried legs pulled in, ankle over knee, crossed, uncrossed, finally settling on stretched out and leaning back. When he couldn’t relax he laughed. Even after all these years, the leather cushion still hadn’t molded out of his dad’s shape and into his.
“What’s so funny?” The sexy voice shot straight through his body.
Gabe opened his eyes, but didn’t move. He just watched. Watched as Regan slowly made her way toward him. She was wearing tall, sleek black boots, a tight skirt, and a snug red top that looked soft and hugged every curve to perfection. And she was exactly what he needed right now.
Just looking into those baby blues, at those full lips, made his world spin back to right. He didn’t even realize how far he’d shifted off axis until she walked out on that balcony and filled his mind with nothing but her. A strange reaction to have for the woman who confused him more than any other person on the planet.
“I was thinking how, no matter how hard I try, my dad’s seat will never feel right.” If he was surprised at his admission, he was even more shocked at how good it felt to finally say it aloud. To Regan.