SLACK FRIDAY: NOVEMBER 28, 2014
Avoid crazed shopping crowds!
Keep calm and carry on at home
with these great
Merr-E Holiday
Treats from Pocket Star eBooks!
THE PERFECT GIFT
Dani-Lyn Alexander
November 17, 2014
$.99
SUMMARY:
’Tis the night
before Christmas…and businessman and single father Jason is scrambling to find
the dollhouse of the season for his seven-year-old daughter Emily. But when he
finally strikes gold at an obscure toy store, he’s met with
resistance—literally, as a beautiful woman named Leah is grabbing onto the
dollhouse box from the other side of the aisle, determined to get the same
Christmas present for her own daughter.
Desperate not to let the other win, Jason and Leah forge a pact: stay together until they find the same dollhouse at a different toy store. It sounds simple, but ten stores and many hours later, they still come up empty. They might not be finding another dollhouse, but they sure are finding a lot to talk about and, as their mutual attraction grows, the unlikely pair finds the greatest holiday gift of all—love.
Desperate not to let the other win, Jason and Leah forge a pact: stay together until they find the same dollhouse at a different toy store. It sounds simple, but ten stores and many hours later, they still come up empty. They might not be finding another dollhouse, but they sure are finding a lot to talk about and, as their mutual attraction grows, the unlikely pair finds the greatest holiday gift of all—love.
EXCERPT:
Ten minutes. Jason had ten minutes to make the twenty-minute trip
across town. He’d never be on time for his meeting. He stared at his watch as
if it would tell him something different this time. Acid rolled in his stomach.
Well, they’d just have to wait. Christmas Eve was tomorrow and he had to take
care of getting Emily’s present. Truthfully, he should have gotten it already,
but between working, looking after the house, and taking care of Emily, he had
little time left over for anything else.
The only thing Emily had asked for this year was the Little Family
Dollhouse. She’d get other gifts, too, of course, but he had to be sure to have
that one. A coworker he’d spoken to before he left the office had told him how
popular the house was with girls Emily’s age. Every little girl she knew either
had one or had put it at the top of her list for Santa. Apparently now it was
almost impossible to find. She’d suggested this small, out-of-the-way toy store
that specialized in hard-to-find items. So here he was, sitting in a traffic jam,
hoping it wasn’t too late to get what he needed. Impatience threatened to
strangle him. He glanced again at the clock on the dashboard.
Emily was mature for seven, so he knew she’d accept that he couldn’t
find the dollhouse. Still, he didn’t want her to be disappointed. Since Karen’s
death, he’d raised her on his own, and so far it had proved to be the most
challenging, most rewarding thing he’d ever done, and he desperately wanted to
do it right.
The traffic light turned red, and Jason ground his back molars. Not
one car had moved while the light was green. Not. One. Car. City traffic was
the last thing he needed right now. He clutched the steering wheel tightly and
dropped his head onto his clenched fists. This was ridiculous. Who would
schedule a lunchtime meeting all the way across town on the day before
Christmas Eve? His boss, that’s who. How could he possibly get all of this
done? He rubbed his temples with the heels of his hands. Didn’t these people
need to be at work or something? The motorist behind him hit the horn—again—and
Jason couldn’t help but wonder what the man was beeping at. There was nowhere
to go. No doubt he was just voicing his frustration. While Jason could
certainly feel his pain, the constant honking was grating on his nerves.
Spotting a gap in the traffic, he darted to the right as soon as the
light changed. He whipped around the next corner and slipped into a parking
spot only two blocks from the toy store. Figuring he was lucky to get this
close, he locked the car and jogged the two blocks. The freezing-cold drizzle
not only soaked him but also coated the sidewalk with a thin sheet of ice.
Since he was dressed for work in his suit and hard-soled dress shoes, the going
wasn’t easy. Slipping when he turned to enter the store, he went down hard. His
feet slid out from under him and he hit the wet sidewalk, scraping his chin on
the step, tearing a hole in the knee of his pants, and soaking himself in the
process.
Could this day get any worse? Even as the thought crossed his mind, things
indeed got worse. As he pushed himself up, he caught a glimpse through the
front door of the toy store. Although a few customers still browsed inside, the
clerk was already putting the key into the lock. Oh, no! She can’t. Clutching
the handrail tightly, he hurried up the two front steps to the door, grabbing
hold of it before she could turn the key.
“I’m sorry, sir. We’re closing early today. I’m flying down to Florida
to visit family for the holidays.”
Soaking wet, shivering in the cold, he could certainly appreciate her
hurry to head south, but he had to get into that store. “Please. I just need
one thing. It’s really important. I promise I’ll only be a minute.”
Apparently, the woman could tell he was having a rough day, because
she gave him a sympathetic look as she held the door open and gestured for him
to enter.
“Thank you so much.”
He looked around, quickly locating the girls’ section and headed
straight for the aisle that held the dollhouses. The store was small but
crowded with merchandise, and it took him several trips up and
down the aisle to realize the dollhouse he needed wasn’t there. Great.
Now what would he do? He hated disappointing Emily. Shoving his fingers through
his hair in frustration, he turned to leave.
Unbelievable. He took a deep breath to ease the disappointment
pressing like a weight against his chest. Just when he thought this day
couldn’t get any worse, he spotted it. The Little Family Dollhouse. It sat on
the end of the aisle, pushed against the back of the shelf, and there was only
one left. Wary of his slippery shoes on the wet floor, he moved cautiously but
quickly toward the shelf. Breathing a sigh of
relief, he grabbed the box, turned to head for the register, and…met
with resistance. Snapping back around, he pulled again. Once more the box was
yanked away from him. He held tight to the dollhouse
as he peered around the corner of the aisle at the other set of
fingers holding onto his prize. A small, delicate hand had managed an
incredibly tight grip on the box. His gaze slid up the arm and into
the biggest, bluest, most beautiful eyes he’d ever seen. The breath
caught in his throat.
LEAH GRIPPED THE dollhouse as tightly as she could and stared into
eyes that had to be made from melted chocolate. She’d never seen such amazing
eyes, and her gaze held his.
“I’m sorry. I need to get this dollhouse.” He still hadn’t taken his
eyes from hers.
She smiled her best smile. “I’m sorry, too, but I had it first.”
“Look,” he started, smiling back at her, the expression filling his
eyes with even more warmth, and Leah’s heart melted a little bit. “I don’t mean
to be rude, but I really need to have this dollhouse.”
His eyes might have melted her heart, but there was no way she was
letting go of this box. Motherhood prevailed. She’d called all over the city
looking for this dollhouse, and now that she’d found it, nothing could make her
part with it, not even a pair of eyes she could easily lose herself in.
“This is the only thing my daughter asked for this year. I must have
it.” Her grin faltered for just a second before she plastered it firmly back in
place. Then she pulled her gaze away from his eyes, effectively removing any
temptation she might have felt to release her hold on the box.
Having been so enthralled by his eyes, she’d somehow missed taking in
the rest of him, and the sight that greeted her now left her momentarily
speechless. He was a mess. His gray pin-striped business suit was soaking wet,
dirty, and torn. Wet hair stuck up in thick, dark clumps along one side of his
head. A large scrape marred his very sexy chin.
All right, don’t go there. Wow, he really was having a bad
day.
He exhaled one of those annoyed male sighs she knew so well. “Look,
let’s be reasonable here. I already had the box in my hand when you grabbed
hold of it.”
“Actually, I had my hand on it first, and then you grabbed it.” Her
smile wavered as she started to realize he might not release his hold.
“Okay, I’ll pay you the cost of the dollhouse if you’ll let me have
this one.”
The dollhouse cost over a hundred dollars, and she had to admit the
money would come in handy. Her job as a receptionist didn’t pay much. The only
reason she hadn’t looked for the gift sooner was that
she’d had to wait for her final paycheck before Christmas. Although
she was tempted to accept his offer, she still held tight.
Allison hadn’t asked for anything else for Christmas. Leah had to have
the dollhouse for her.
“I’m sorry. Even though your offer is very generous”—you jerk—“I’m
afraid I can’t accept. My daughter is only seven, and this is the only thing
she asked for this year. I have to have it for her. I’ve already been all over
the city looking for it. I’m sure you can understand.”
She mentally kicked herself even as the words left her mouth. Maybe he
hadn’t realized how impossible these things were to find. If Mr. Chocolate Eyes
thought he’d be able to find another one, she might have a better chance of
getting him to release his hold on the box. He forked his free hand through his
hair. Good grief. No wonder it was so messy.
“Okay, let’s be reasonable.” He took another long breath, his wet
clothes clinging to broad shoulders. “Only one of us can have the dollhouse. I
understand your position. I have a seven-year-old as well. This dollhouse is
the only thing she put on her list for Santa this year. She’d be so
disappointed if it wasn’t under the tree. Please, is there any way I can talk
you into letting me have it?”
“We’re obviously both in the same position. As adults, surely we can
resolve this somehow.” She couldn’t help but wonder what he’d do if she just
yanked the box out of his hand and ran. The only
problem being she’d have to stop and pay for it. She couldn’t just run
out of the store. Or could she? She glanced toward the front door and chewed on
her bottom lip. She could always come back in later,
after he’d gone, and pay for it. Of course, if the owner called the
police and they caught her before she could come back, she’d spend Christmas in
jail.
Definitely not an option. Allison didn’t have anyone but her mother
and had never known her father. He’d taken off the day he found out Leah was
pregnant. Right now Allison was with Leah’s parents in Ohio. She’d be home
tomorrow, though, and Leah had to be at the airport to pick her up, not sitting
in a jail cell for petty theft. No, she couldn’t run.
He was still staring at her, apparently thinking her silence meant she
was contemplating his offer. “All right, maybe we could—”
“Excuse me.” The sales clerk didn’t appear to be the least bit amused.
She stood with her arms folded across her chest, her foot tapping and a scowl
on her face. “Sir, I let you in because you told me you just needed one thing.
You said you’d only be a minute. I have to lock up now or I’m going to miss my
flight.”
“We seem to have a misunderstanding here.”
At least he had the good grace to blush when he explained the
situation.
“I don’t really care who gets the dollhouse. In one minute I’m locking
that door and I won’t sell it to wither of you.” She turned her back on them
and walked away, effectively ending any argument either of them could come up
with.
When the Christmas music stopped and the lights flipped off a minute
later, Leah panicked. “Come on. I really need to have this. Neither of us is
going to get it if you don’t let go. Now.” Desperation nearly choked her.
“Maybe we can find another one somewhere else, but we’re definitely not going
to find rwo. Let me have this one and I’ll help you find another one.”
He appeared to be as surprised as she was by the offer, but he still
didn’t let go.
“I’m leaving.” The clerk’s voice rang out, sounding completely
annoyed.
“No,” they cried in unison.
“I’ll tell you what.” The man quickly glanced at the clerk and then
back at her. “We’ll split the cost of this one and go together to look for
another one. Then we’ll split the cost of that one, and we’ll each end up with
a dollhouse.”
The rattle of keys made
Leah’s decision. “Fine. You’re on.”
AUTHOR:
Dani-Lyn Alexander is a native New Yorker. She was born in Rome, New York,
then moved to Rosedale, and finally to Long Island. She still lives on eastern
Long Island with her husband and three children. Please visit http://www.danilynalexander.com/.
Follow her on Twitter: @DaniLynAlexande
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