Read A Christmas to Believe In Online
Authors: Claire Ashgrove
skipped several beats.
Ethan had invited him to stay.
He'd been so exhausted last night it hadn't registered as
anything more than an excuse to watch the foal. But Ethan
tied Jesse into the conversation, invited Clint inside, and
suggested he stay. Not a direct question—but as poignant as
if he'd painted it on a sign. No one had encouraged him, no
one had guilted him into the overture. Ethan built the bridge
all on his own.
Clint snatched the ring and fisted it into his palm.
Abandoning his coffee, he bolted up the stairs to his room. He
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didn't have time for clothes. Wouldn't put another minute
between him and Jesse. She'd just have to deal with his
pajamas. Hell, he'd go barefoot if it weren't below freezing
outside. As he pulled on his socks and shoved his feet in his
boots, all the painful tension inside his body unwound. His
heart leapt into triple time, and from somewhere down deep,
a smile broke free.
He shoved the ring onto his pinkie, closed his hand to keep
it from falling off, and dashed out of his bedroom. Barreling
down the stairs, he nearly knocked over a woman who
followed his earlier progression to the kitchen.
"Sorry, Nicolette," he called as she grabbed at the rail to
keep from tripping.
At the bottom of the stairs, Clint skidded to a stop. He
whipped around and stared. Dressed in the T-shirt Clint had
last seen Heath in and a pair of oversized boxer shorts,
Nicolette offered him a hesitant smile. Along the side of her
pretty face, deep creases from sleep sank into her skin. Her
long hair hung in a ratty mess.
"What are you..." Clint shook his head. He didn't have time
to figure it out. "Never mind."
He ran through the house, bolted out the front door and
leaped into his truck. It fishtailed madly as he gunned it down
the drive. He let up on the gas, straightened out the nose and
pulled in a deep breath.
Easy. She's not going anywhere. It's
Christmas.
He skidded around the turn anyway.
Like sweet salvation, her driveway rose before him. He
roared up it, slammed on his brakes, and slid to a stop well
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out of range of her car. His door had barely opened before he
jumped out and ran for the door.
One shove, and the sticky corner didn't protest. He
stepped inside, anticipating the quiet of a house still asleep.
Only, from the Christmas tree, Ethan jumped to his feet.
The boy's posture relaxed as he recognized Clint, but in
the next instant, he raced over and grabbed Clint's arm.
"You've got to fix it, Clint. I didn't mean it. I didn't mean any
of it." Voice laced with urgency, Ethan's eyes pled with Clint.
"She told me she did it because of me."
A tide of compassion swept through Clint. Like all children,
Ethan had yet to understand the power of words. He might be
thirteen, he might be trying to fill a man's shoes, but deep
down where it mattered, Ethan was just an innocent little
boy.
Clint bent to eye-level and took hold of Ethan's shoulders.
"Not because of you.
For
you. There's a difference. I would
have done the same thing if I were in her shoes. Now, where
is she?"
"Asleep."
Nodding, Clint studied Ethan's features. "I want to ask you
something, Ethan. I want you to answer me truthfully."
"Okay."
"I know you don't trust me much. I know you don't like me
much. But I love your mom, and if you'll let me, I'd like to
love you. I'll do whatever it takes to make things work with
you and me." At Ethan's wrinkled nose, Clint took a breath,
held it. "Can I be part of this family, Ethan? Will you be part
of
mine
?"
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Ethan's gaze narrowed a fraction. "We play video games
every night before I go to bed."
The breath Clint had been holding slowly slipped free.
"Maybe you can teach me?"
On a shrug, Ethan said, "Maybe." He cocked his head,
squinted at Clint. "Saturday mornings, Mom gets up early and
fixes chocolate-chip pancakes. We watch cartoons together.
Then we do something I want to do."
Clint's fingers gripped tighter as he nodded his head. The
warning was subtle, but there all the same—he'd share, but
he still wanted his time with Jesse.
"And." Ethan scrunched his features together in disgust. "I
don't want to see you kiss. Yuck."
A hearty burst of laughter broke free, and Clint crushed
Ethan into a hug. He let go, stood up and ruffled his hair. "I
don't know about the last. But I think I can work with
everything else."
Ethan rolled his eyes and went back to the tree. "Tell her I
want to open my gifts."
Clint didn't need to hear anything more. He took the stairs
to Jesse's room two at a time. Outside her door, he paused to
regroup. He couldn't just burst inside and scare her. This
required a little bit of finesse.
Easing the door open, he quietly stepped into her
bedroom. His gaze settled on her sleeping form, and his heart
swelled to painful limits. Still dressed in that stunning evening
gown, she lay curled on her side, her beautiful face turned to
him. He approached the bed, crawled in beside her.
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Sliding an arm around her waist, he nuzzled the delicate
skin at the side of her neck.
Wakefulness infringed on Jesse's dreams. She pushed it
away, unwilling to confront the cold reality of her life, and
struggled to hold on to the pleasant feel of Clint's mouth as it
skimmed across her shoulder.
"I love you, Jesse. I want to marry you," he murmured.
She shivered, rolled toward the alluring warmth.
Goosebumps skipped down her skin as the strap to her gown
gave, and warm, moist breath, dusted along her neck. She
squirmed against the delightful weight on her belly. Sighed as
the stirrings of desire settled between her legs.
"Wake up, sweetheart."
Wake up... She fought off the call of morning, too content
to stay right here where Clint loved her. Where she loved
him, and nothing had them at an impassable divide.
His hand drifted up her belly, curved around her breast.
His gentle squeeze spread the growing heat in her womb
through her veins. The pleasant scrape of calloused fingers as
he lowered the loose satin of her dress shot tingles down her
spine.
Yet the wash of cold air that kissed her skin was a little too
real for a dream. She opened her eyes as Clint's lips closed
around her aroused nipple. Arching into the ecstasy of his
mouth, she let out a gasp. Her fingers fisted into his scalp,
and she pressed his head deeper to her breast.
"What are you doing here?" she murmured.
Clint lifted his head. A sweep of his thick thigh, and he
rolled her flat on her back to cover her body with his. Staring
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down into her eyes, he smiled. "Trying to convince you to
marry me."
Her heart leapt to her throat, and she let the delirious
sensations engulf her. Marry Clint. He'd left whatever trapped
him to a life of independence and offered the one thing she
wanted more than Ethan.
Ethan wouldn't stand for this. All the budding happiness
crashed against a wave of heart-wrenching sorrow. No matter
how she craved a life with Clint, she couldn't do that to her
son.
On a heavy sigh, she let go of Clint's hair.
Undaunted, he braced himself on his elbows and rubbed
the tip of his nose across hers. Brushed his mouth over her
lips. He lifted up, brought his hands atop her chest. Between
both thumb and forefinger a diamond sparkled.
One corner of his mouth tugged with a grin as he said, "I
already have Ethan's permission. I just need yours."
The shock of his words brought her upright, dislodging him
in the process. "You what?"
Chuckling, Clint dragged her back down beneath him and
pinned her to the bed. "Say yes. It's Christmas. Say yes, then
I'll explain."
"Yes," she answered on a breathless exhale. "God yes,
Clint. But how?" She wrapped her arms around his waist, slid
her hands along his back, up to his shoulders, down to his
tight buttocks. Soft cotton met her fingertips. "Are you in
your pajamas?"
Clint let out an exasperated sigh. He caught her hand,
brought it around in front of him. Holding her gaze, he slid
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the ring onto her finger. "You really know how to spoil my
proposal here, sweetheart."
A flush crept to her cheeks. Under the heat of it, she
lowered her gaze and tried to duck her chin.
"I had a bunch of pretty things picked out to say. Things
like, one day away from you almost killed me. How every
time I look at my nieces, I see the kids I want to have with
you. How I don't want to live a life without you in it. As my
partner, my wife—the only person I could ever trust with my
fears."
Jesse clamped sharp teeth into her lower lip as tears
welled. Oh, God, this was happening. It was really real. She'd
just agreed to marry Clint King. And he was the most
beautiful man on this earth.
"I was going to tell you how I sold my farm to Susan Silby.
I was going to ask you if I could buy the old barn, so my
pride can hold on to something. I had intended to suggest we
become official partners and come up with some sort of stable
name that illustrated that. And I planned to tell you I had
decided it would be okay to accept your offer on a horse, so
long as you let me set up a college fund for Ethan and let me
pay it all back."
He drizzled kisses across her face, drying her tears as they
tumbled free. At the closing of her throat, her fingers dug into
his buttocks, and Jesse ordered herself to breathe.
"You aren't interested in all that, are you?" He chuckled.
Shook his dark head. "No, the woman who works on cars and
can slug better than me wouldn't want to hear pretty things. I
should have known."
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Oh no, that was so not true. He could go on for hours and
she'd never tire of hearing those incredible words. She
opened her mouth to protest.
"You'd rather hear about how Ethan built a bridge all on his
own in the barn last night. How almost losing a foal broke
past all that insecurity. You'd rather me tell you I was too
dense to hear his invitation last night, too heartbroken to
hear the hope. Pretty words are nice, but what you really care
about is that a few minutes ago Ethan and I struck a deal."
Dropping his head, he planted a firm kiss on her mouth.
"You have to play video games with him at night. He gets you
on Saturdays." A frown touched his dark eyebrows as he
concluded, "And he'd really prefer it if I don't kiss you in front
of him."
"Oh, Clint!" With a squeal, she buried her head into his
shoulder and hung on tight.
His arms wrapped around her, and he hauled her into a
sitting position. Taking both her shoulders in his hands, he
eased her away to gaze into her eyes. Love burned within
those amber depths. Love more potent and more consuming
than Jesse had ever hoped she might see. She cupped his
cheek, brushed her thumb over his stubbly whiskers. "I love
you," she whispered.
He caught her hands and lifted her knuckles to his lips. In
the grey light of morning, the diamond that had adorned
Amelia's hand for as long as she could remember glinted.
"I don't have a lot, Jesse. But I'll give it all to you. To
Ethan. Just keep believing in me. I won't disappoint you."
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She leaned closer to touch her lips to his. "You never
could, Clinton King. I have you. Just you. That's all that
matters." Surrendering to all the love she felt for this
incredible man, she drew him into a lingering kiss.
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Clint opened the door to his mother's house and ushered
his new family into the riot of gleeful squeals and hearty
laughter. The timeless aroma of cinnamon rolls permeated
the air, blending with the rich fragrance of coffee. He held fast
to Jesse's hand, but urged Ethan toward the tree.
"I saw a couple of things under there for you."
In an excited display that matched his youth, Ethan
hurried to the tree. Seeing the boy as he should be, not all
bundled up behind a line of stone defenses, made Clint's
chest even tighter. He fit right in here. Just like Jesse.