Happy Holidays Everyone!
I'm sharing the start of my Christmas novella, Full Contact Decorating. The novella will be available at all venues the week before Thanksgiving, but if any of you Romancing the Genre readers are interested in reading the full novella, email me at AuthorRobinWeaver@yahoo.com (or leave a comment) and I'll send you a free Kindle version.
Chapter One
Carol of the Bets
A second chance. After a year of throwing soot in her face, Fate had tossed Katerina Snodgrass a sugarplum. Her man was back.
She stared
at Tripp Anthony through the window of the Brew Mistress. After their high
school graduation ceremony, she’d refused to move to Hollywood with him
. A mistake.
But
one she could rectify. If she could make him want her again, and if she regained
her title as the Christmas Tree champion, perhaps her life could get back on
track. What on track meant exactly, she
didn’t know, but things had to change. Last year needed to fade into history.
She believed
she’d come through the fog as a better
person and was attempting to be even better. Only being kinder-gentler-wiser
seemed impossible when life kept trying to run her over with a reindeer.
The
soap opera star ran a hand over his blond hair as he sipped his coffee—or latte,
or whatever. The man was totally oblivious to her. And to her once-in-a
lifetime epiphany.
Taking
a deep breath, she hurried inside. “Tripp. Hi.”
“Katerina?”
He looked her up and down, in a way that clearly negated those tabloid rumors
about his sexuality. “You look…great.”
Had
he lost his mind? She wore old jeans and an out-of-style sweater, a bright red one
because her boss Suzette expected all Forrester Florals employees to wear
Christmas colors. Worse, she’d gained fifteen pounds—another reason for the
jeans. Her doctor was pleased with her weight, but now that she was a size four,
most of her clothes didn’t fit.
No matter.
No one would get a glimpse of her insecurity. Ever. Regardless of what her
shrink said.
Ever
true to her motto, never let ‘em see you
ruffled, she flashed her best smile. “Thanks. You here for the annual
play?”
He
nodded. “Yeah. We’re doing The Christmas
Cactus. I’m playing Fred.”
She
blinked. “The Christmas Cactus? Is
the Town Council okay with that? Merryvale has done A Christmas Carol for…well, years.” A new play meant Tripp would
have to learn new lines. Would be tough to execute her get-him-back plan if he wasn’t available.
He
shrugged. “The new mayor is trying to switch things up. Wants to distance
himself from Mayor Snod… I’m so sorry, Kat. Didn’t mean to… I’m sorry.”
Everybody
knew her father had lost the election, but had Tripp heard more? Blast dear old
Dad and his late-life crises. After the votes were counted, her father skipped
town, gobbling up her trust fund in the process. Katerina had gotten one text
message:
I’m fine, baby girl. Call you soon.
That
was six months ago.
Best
to change the subject. “You must be happy to be back in Merryvale.”
Last
year, Tripp returned to his hometown for the first time since high school. Merryvale
had always loved him, but now that he was a big soap star, he was more popular
than Santa Claus. In a town that lived for Christmas.
Instead
of flashing his trademark smile, Tripp frowned. “It won’t be the same without
Suzette.”
Suzette? Katerina’s internal
twinkle lights dimmed. She could almost hate Suzette. Only she loved her too
much. Suzette probably saved her life, but did Tripp have to dote on her too?
“She’s
married now, Tripp.”
He
flashed a sad little smile. “I know. Spence is a lucky guy.”
Great
Marley’s ghost. Tripp acted as if he were a little in love with Suzette. He’d certainly
spent a lot of time with her last Christmas.
Didn’t
matter. Katerina Snodgrass would not wimp out because Mr. Hunk-alicious still
had a little crush on her friend and employer. She’d crush that crush. Should
be easy with Suze in New York, working as CFO in Spencer’s architectural firm.
“Mind
if I sit?” she asked, taking a seat before he could make an excuse. “I was
hoping you could help me.”
Tripp
blinked. “Eh—”
“I
need a third person for my decorating team,” she said, rushing her words.
Trip
blinked again, the same gesture that made millions of Everyday Lives fans fantasize
about starring with him in a sex tape. “You mean for the Christmas Tree
Contest?”
No Genius, for the chili cook-off. Katerina
instantly regretted her snarky thoughts. Hadn’t she vowed to be a nicer person?
And she loved Tripp.
She attempted
a demure smile. Although she’d never done demure in her life.
Tripp
smiled, showing off perfect teeth and oozing Hollywood sexiness. “Can’t.”
“Okay
that… What?” Ouch.
“Don’t
go all Katerina on me.” He smiled again, this one almost playful—a quality he
hadn’t possessed when they’d dated in high school. “I’d like to help, but I
can’t. I’m a judge.”
Ouch
canceled. “Hmmm.” She attempted her most seductive expression, one that never
failed. “Does sitting with me mean you’re cavorting with the enemy?”
Tripp
laughed.
Good.
She’d amused him. That was a start.
“You’re
not an enemy, Pumpkin,” he said, stirring his cappuccino. “Just can’t have
people thinking I’m open to bribes.”
Poor
man had no idea about the bribe assault she planned to launch. Her objective: make
him forget all about one Suzette Forrester. In less than a week.
“I’d
never dream of bribing you, Tripp Anthony, but I am planning to make my
homemade duck à l’orange tonight. One could hardly consider duck a bribe.”
The
smile faded from his Hollywood gorgeous face. “Eh, sorry, Kat, but I probably
need to get my head together before I climb back on the dating horse.”
Well,
Figgie pudding. Tripp must really have it bad for Suzette if he turned down
duck à l ‘orange. Still, she’d never met a man she couldn’t entice.
Although,
she’d never had a man she could keep either. Not that she’d wanted to keep
anyone before.
Perhaps
she needed to change her strategy. “Hold on there, cowboy. I wasn’t asking you out.
You know I can’t eat an entire duck by myself. Just wanted to share my food
with an old friend.” She held her breath.
Tripp
frowned. Had she made her situation worse?
“I’m
sorry, I thought...” He ran a hand over his tawny hair. “Took me a long time to
get over us the last time, Kat. I can’t
go through that again.”
Hell,
the man wasn’t giving her much to work with. “I hoped we could be friends now,
Tripp. With Suzette gone, I could use a pal. I heard she helped you with your
script last year. I’ll be glad to read with you if that helps. Like we did with
your literature homework. You seem to memorize better when I read to you.”
He
studied her, almost as if he was trying to get inside her head. Tripp had
changed, too. The old Tripp never looked beneath the surface. “Friends, huh?”
She
nodded.
He
seemed hesitant. Even that expression looked good on him. Of course, anything
would look good on Tripp Anthony. His tongue-tying handsomeness made him a
megastar, even if only a megastar in the soap opera world.
“I
didn’t know you and Suzette were friends. I thought…”
Of course,
he wouldn’t know. She hadn’t seen Tripp since Suzette came to her rescue that
dreary day at last year’s Christmas Tree Contest. “You know she decorated my
tree for me, right? And I’m managing Forrester Florals now. I consider her one
of my best friends.”
“No
kidding?” All traces of unsure vanished. “I heard about the tree, but I
thought…”
“Thought what?” Had Suzette told him something
else? Something Katerina wasn’t ready to share?
“I
thought Suzette was just being Suzette.” He flashed a goofy grin.
“You
mean fixing things just because they need fixing?” Suzette was the best at
that.
“No.”
Tripp grimaced. You’d think Mother Teresa had been insulted. “Well, yes, sort
of.” He pulled his wallet out of his leather jacket and pulled out some bills.
Was he leaving? Just like that?
Uh-oh.
Katerina couldn’t let him go now. Only what should she do?
If the
lovesick Tripp wanted a Suzette-type, she could be that. At least until she got
back in his good graces—or got him into her bed. Then, he’d be hers and she could
be herself—whoever the hell she was.
She placed
a hand on his forearm. “I am trying
to be more like Suzette. You know, show my friends
I care.” That was mostly true. Santa help her. The perky Suzette had
gotten under Katerina’s skin, too. With kindness, no less. And Katerina did want to be nicer. Not Suzette syrupy,
but nice in her own way. “Give me a chance to prove I’m your friend, Tripp. Come
to dinner. Around seven?” Holy Scrooge. Had that pathetic plea come from her
lips?
Tripp
twisted his mouth to one side, a gesture she’d hated during their dating days.
Now, the expression was kind of cute. “Just friends?”
Incense, frankincense, and myrrh.
The things a girl had to do. “Just friends,” she replied, resisting the urge to
cross her fingers behind her back.
End of Exerpt
The Original Merryvale Novella
3 comments:
Thanks for a fun peek at your new release! Looks like a winner to me!!!
Love this excerpt. The book's going to be fun. Thanks
Love it so far! Cant wait for more :)
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