Read A Christmas to Believe In Online
Authors: Claire Ashgrove
I have to go back to foal out this mare. But as soon as Angel
delivers, I have a little time until the weather breaks enough
to start training..."
A soft smile crept across her mouth.
"I know it's not ideal. I know it's asking a lot of you. You
could meet someone else, someone who has the time to
spend with you. Someone who can give you-"
The rest of his speech died beneath the tender press of her
lips. She kissed him tenderly, the sweet slide of her tongue
against his answering all the unasked questions that
ricocheted through his mind. Easing it to a close, she looped
her arms around his neck and whispered, "I love you. I'll
wait. However long it takes, Clint."
The breath he'd been holding came out in a rush. He
touched his forehead to hers, gathered her against his chest.
Yet when he pulled away to finally confess the feeling in his
heart, what he saw in her gaze twisted a knife into his heart.
Hurt lurked there. Sorrow he'd caused. She'd agreed because
she had no better option.
Knowing only one way to make the heartache lessen, Clint
scooped her into his arms and let their shared desire say all
the words he could not find.
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As the grey light of morning peeked through the break in
Clint's curtains, Jesse opened her eyes to the man who lay in
her arms. His body shuddered in perfect harmony with hers.
Sublime pleasure carried her up, up, up to a plateau so high
she clung to him for fear she'd fall off the edge and plummet
to some horrible fate. Just as she would when he left. As he'd
promised to do when he proposed a long distance affair.
With the way he'd roused her through the night, the way
he stirred her flesh as if he too feared they'd already lost each
other, she should be numb and heady with bliss. It would be
a miracle if the whole household hadn't heard her soft cries,
the calls of ecstasy she couldn't contain no matter how she
tried. Clint knew exactly how to elicit her heart, and last night
he'd made it impossible to believe he didn't share the same
love that consumed her.
And yet, his love for her pained her even more. With his
hesitant request, the full truth of their situation had crashed
into her. She would wait—he'd always hold her heart. But
what had slipped into her consciousness along with the
realization Clint would leave was the damning understanding
she would have to choose. She loved Ethan as much as she
loved Clint. What divided them far more than horses and
Kentucky, cleaved her heart in two. How could she choose,
when without either one of them, half of her would wither and
die?
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Clint dusted his lips along the side of her neck. His
morning stubble grazed her cheek, prickled her swollen
mouth. But his kiss was soft. Intoxicating. The staggering
sensations that carried her adrift ebbed, and she floated down
from her place amongst the stars. She caught Clint's face in
her hands. Held him still to indulge a moment longer.
Their rhythm slowed. Sweat slickened, their bodies
tumbled together in a spent heap. In the silence, their
breaths came in ragged gasps. Jesse snuggled into his
comfortable weight and trailed her fingertips down his spine.
Uneven footsteps approached the door. At Clint's mutter,
Jesse grinned. "Did you lock it?"
His chest heaved with soft chuckles. He shook his head.
"You were half naked when I turned around. What do you
think?"
"I think you better remember to start locking the door."
She'd no more uttered the words when his bedroom door
cracked open. "Honey? Jesse?"
Clint rolled his eyes and let out a sigh. "Yes, Mom?"
"I set clean towels out in the hall for the both of you. Are
you hungry, Jesse?"
Clearing her voice against the awkwardness of talking to
Clint's mother while her son was still nestled deep inside her,
Jesse widened her eyes. "Ah, no thank you. I can...ah...fend
for myself."
"Okay. Well, you two kids know where everything is. The
plows have been busy all morning. Alex came by and cleared
the driveway. I'm going to see if I can get into the drive-thru
at the drugstore real quick."
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Clint's voice blended with Jesse's as they said, "Be
careful."
The door shut, and Jesse gave into a fit of giggles. "This is
weird."
"No shit. She's my mom." He eased himself out of her and
flopped onto his back at her side. "I suppose that was a hint."
Jesse curled into Clint's side and ran her hand over the
broad expanse of his chest. "To get out of bed, or to stop
fooling around?"
He flashed her a wicked grin. "Both." Rolling onto his side,
he propped his head up on one arm. "I'll have you know, she
surprised me by not offering you the guest room last night.
You're the only woman she's ever allowed to stay."
"Really?
Clint chuckled again. With a slow nod of his head, he
skated a hand over Jesse's hip. "She loves you, Jesse." His
fingertips drifted over the curve to her buttocks. Goosebumps
broke out along her skin. She closed her eyes to the feel of
Clint's hand as he meandered over her ribs. When his fingers
settled around her breast, and he gently squeezed, she let
out a gasp. Opening her eyes, she found him staring at her,
his amber eyes dark and intense.
"Kinda like I love you," he whispered.
Her heart skidded to a stop. Unable to breathe, she stared
into his tender gaze and fought off the sudden rise of tears.
Lifting her hand, she brushed her fingertips over his mouth,
ran her thumb across his lower lip.
"The only promises I can make, except that one, are
empty." His voice roughened as he continued, "I'll figure my
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life out, Jesse. I'll get myself on my feet. Maybe it won't be
too late when I do. Maybe it will. But, I promise you, I'll
always love you."
She sniffled, blinked back the tears. They defied her and
slipped down her cheeks anyway. With a swipe of her hand,
she wiped them away and threw her arms around Clint. "It
won't be too late. I'll wait, Clint. It's not what I want, not
exactly no. But I'll wait, if you're convinced you won't let me
help."
"I'm not taking your money. I have to stand on my own, to
respect myself at all."
She nodded against his shoulder. "Okay." Inside, a
thousand protests screamed the reasons he ought to. But she
stifled them, squashed them back into a forgotten corner of
her mind, knowing all too well he wouldn't listen. His damned
pride refused to let him. Stubborn pride that matched his
father's, though Clint would never see the similarity.
"I want Ethan to come spend some time with me. Spring
break maybe."
She drew back with a frown. "He'll never go for it."
"He will if you take away the options. Bring him down. He
and I will work it out. If he needs to land one in my face...
Well, I know where the ice is."
"He'll run off," she argued.
Shaking his head, Clint framed the side of her face with a
thick palm. "No. He won't. He's got the courage to tell me off,
but he's not brave enough to walk away from you. When he
realizes I'm going to keep coming back, whether he likes it or
not, things will change."
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He drew her back into his embrace, held her tight.
"Whatever happens from here," he murmured into her hair.
"Don't you ever doubt how much I love you."
She had his love. Her heart grew wings and soared. Yet
the heights it could have climbed to were blocked by an
uncertain future. He made no commitment to forever. Offered
her no concrete plan to when they might have a life together.
Weeks and months of phone calls, occasional visits, nights
spent longing for the feel of his warmth held no candle to
waking up each morning to the weight of Clint's arm around
her waist, or coming home to quiet nights as a family. Still,
she clung to what he offered. At least it was something. And
his love outweighed all the obstacles.
"I want to take you both to dinner tonight. Think you can
manage that?" Letting her go, he pushed himself upright.
"I'll talk to Ethan. If he throws a fit, will you settle for just
me?"
As he rose from the bed and hauled on his boxers, he
glanced over his shoulder to give her a grin. "That's not
settling." He reached through the door and produced two
fluffy blue towels. With a devilish wag of his eyebrows, he
asked, "Wanna join me?"
"I should get home. Get the house picked up. I'll try
bribing Ethan with some brownies first."
"You can take the truck if you want. I'll walk over in a little
while and check on Angel."
She slid out of the bed and pulled on her clothes. "Why
don't you let me walk home? I think I can remember what
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you had me do the other night when we tested Angel. I'll call
you if the strip looks any different."
His frown said she'd lost her mind. "Don't be silly. There's
snow out there."
"Yeah, and I've done it a hundred times or more before.
There's one field between our houses. I think I can handle it."
"Jesse..." His voice held the warning she shouldn't test
him. "Take the truck."
On a heavy sigh, she sank onto the mattress. "Clint, don't
take this the wrong way. I don't want the truck there when
Ethan gets home. All he'll do is assume you're there, and any
chance of talking to him will be lost. He'll be mad before I
open my mouth."
He considered her words as he studied her face. After
several long seconds of silence, he slowly nodded his head.
"Okay. I don't like it, but okay."
Satisfied she hadn't bruised him too much, Jesse jumped
up and gave his cheek a quick kiss. "Then I'll see you later."
"Be ready by six."
Humming a soft tune beneath her breath, Jesse hurried
down the stairs. Ethan wouldn't be pleased in any respect.
But for this, for Clint, she'd give it a try. And today wouldn't
end before she sucked it up and explained to Ethan why it
was so important to her.
Clint spun the faucets off and shook his hair. He grabbed
at his towel, dragged it down his chest, then paused, his mind
drifting back to his conversation with Jesse. He'd mucked the
whole speech up. Frankly, he shouldn't have said a word.
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What he'd managed to feebly spit out didn't sound as
eloquent as it had in his head.
Worse, with that utterance, guilt clawed into his gut. Jesse
wanted more. Things he couldn't offer. What kind of man
said, "Sweetheart, I've got nothing. I couldn't begin to pay
your light bill. But will you marry me?"
A fool. And he hadn't been raised a fool. He would not start
being one now. In two days, he'd go home and sit down with
Jim. Look at where they could cut back, what they might sell
off that would give him enough to manage the purchase of a
new sprinter and his overhead. He had two promising
yearlings, come January. While letting them go would hit his
checking account hard, it might generate enough to invest in
one, decently running claimer.
Maybe he could turn some of the paddocks into grass and
grow enough to sell quality hay.
There had to be a way. Once he could solve this puzzle,
he'd have all the time he needed to put his energy into Ethan.
Heaving a sigh, he finished drying off and left the shower.
Sure, there was a way. But damned if he could find it.
Clean jeans on, he exited the bathroom for his bedroom.
At his door, however, he ran into his mother. Arms weighed
down with his sheets, she hobbled back a step, her crutches
nowhere in sight.
"What are you doing, Mom?"
He half expected her to quip something ridiculous like she
was searching for Jesse's virgin blood. Good grief, she'd said
she was leaving.
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"I caught Jesse in the drive and gave her a ride home. But
halfway down the road toward town, I couldn't stop. So I
came back. My prescription can wait until tomorrow."
He sidestepped around her, careful not to knock her off
balance. "I'll go get it for you." Reaching for a clean shirt, he
dragged it over his head. "Would you put my sheets down?
I'm old enough to do my own laundry. And stop hovering. I
appreciate it, really. But I need some time in my head."
She looked down her nose, in the classic
mind your