She wouldn’t have come home at all if she’d known her one-time crush was living next door. Although damn it, if Luke and Gavin had put aside their differences, Luke sure couldn’t hold a grudge against her. She’d been blameless in that whole debacle. It hurt to remember how much she could have used the support of her friends when her father was reported missing but, instead, they hadn’t been speaking to her. Even Kiersten, for a while, had believed Rachel had helped distract the town so her father could abscond with the money.
“You just got here,” her mother protested. “It’s been eight long years. You can’t run out the door at the first asthma attack. I’ll take down the tree.”
“It’s not only that—”
“Don’t be silly. I’ll speak to Katie Garrett about her rudeness, and you will have a nice visit with Kiersten tomorrow. We’ll get it all straightened out. You’ll see.”
Spoken like a woman who took the upbeat elf creed seriously.
Slumping against the kitchen counter, Rachel decided no amount of chamomile was going to fix this. For now, she’d see the tree to appease her mother and then figure out what to tell Kiersten before she left Yuletide.
It wasn’t that she was embarrassed to see an old flame or anything—even though she had chased Gavin with all the subtlety of a goofy, lovesick teenager. But Gavin being here complicated things. What if people thought she only returned because he’d moved in next door? What if Luke thought that too? She’d come home to make peace with Luke, not start trouble all over again.
But Luke and Gavin had clearly renewed their friendship, so she didn’t see why she had to remain the villain in the old drama. She would at least talk to Kiersten and see what she could do to patch things up.
It wasn’t like the citizens of Yuletide could force her out of town, could they? Imagining herself bombarded with snowballs by a bunch of felt-clad villagers helped distract her from the pang of anxiety underneath it.
She wasn’t going to escape town without running into Gavin Blake.
Chapter Two
“Four…three…two…”
The crowd around the hundred-foot Christmas tree in the Yuletide town square counted down to the lighting ceremony two weeks before Christmas. Gavin Blake waited and watched along with all the rest of the tourists. He’d been back in town—off and on, according to his training schedule—for a month now, but he hadn’t made it a point to be outdoors at this time of day to see the daily tree lighting.
“…one! Deck the halls!” The onlookers crowed with delight at the spectacle, a flood of red and green spilling over all of them while the local elementary school choir burst into a rendition of “O Christmas Tree.”
Gavin knew the choir varied according to the day, and the whole schedule was online at the Yuletide website to help visitors plan their trip. Chris Chambers, the idea man behind the town revitalization efforts, might have been a crook, but there was no denying his vision to remake Harristown into a Christmas-themed tourism destination had paid off.
Not for the first time, Gavin’s gaze strayed to the Chambers’ house next door to his own on the other side of the town square, remembering the girl who used to live there. Remembering the time she’d sneaked out of an upstairs window to tag along with him when she’d heard he was going to a bonfire in the woods with some friends from school. He’d been scared she would break her neck climbing back in, so he had canceled his plans and walked her back home, giving her hell the whole way so he didn’t do something stupid like make a pass at her.
He knew, even then, that Luke’s ex was off-limits. It didn’t take a genius to see the guy had been crazy about her even after their split. But damn. Rachel Chambers had been something special. They’d all been friends for years before everything started changing when Luke went into the military. Luke had been a year older than Gavin and Rachel, and they’d spent more time together that year he’d been gone. Just as friends, but still.
When Luke returned from his deployment, Gavin figured things would go back to normal for the three of them. But then Rachel dumped Luke and things took a turn for the awkward.
Fat snowflakes swirled like memories in the dusk. Tonight, the second floor of the old Chambers’ house was quiet except for the lighted wreaths. He could see a family on the front porch, a father holding open the front door so a mother pushing a stroller could enter the gift shop.
Then, on the side of the house, he noticed a slender figure in a dark coat and red ski cap darting out into the snow.
Something about the woman made him do a double take. The furtive way she peered around, maybe. Or the careful way she pushed the door closed behind her with an extra shove—like a woman who knew that it would stick otherwise.
He couldn’t see her well, since she wore her hat low on her forehead and she kept her face turned away from the overflowing town square. But the long, dark hair tied in a ribbon in the middle of her back was familiar. So was the way she moved. Of course, Rachel Chambers hadn’t set foot in Yuletide for eight years—ever since the summer he’d let his guard down and kissed her. She wouldn’t come home now, of all times, with Luke’s wedding just around the corner.
Curious all the same, Gavin left the tree revelers behind to take a closer look, telling himself he was just being a good homeowner since the woman had been skulking around the alleyway next to his house. With his boots crunching through the packed snow, he continued to watch her as she headed toward the parking lot, her steps light and quick. Most of the foot traffic moved in the opposite direction, with families and couples heading into town for dinner or shopping. She darted and dodged, keeping her head down as if she was determined not to be seen.
Closing the distance between them, he calculated the best angle of pursuit. She glanced up once, and he could have sworn her gaze landed on the vintage blue Cadillac sedan parked at the far end. That would be Molly Chambers’ vehicle—and another indicator that his strange hunch was correct.
Well, damn.
His pulse quickened. He was about to intercept Yuletide’s second most infamous escapee—one Rachel Chambers.
If she’d glanced up again, she would have seen him coming toward her. But after she spotted the vehicle, she simply put her head down and picked up the pace, digging in the pocket of her dark overcoat for a ring of jingling keys. A few sets of headlights flashed over her while cars found spots in the lot, but there wasn’t as much activity on the far end near the carousel and the private party igloos.
“Rachel.” He said her name aloud before he reached her, not wanting to scare her in a dark parking lot.
Too late, since she jumped about a foot in the air, emitting a little yelp. Eyes wide, she met his gaze before glancing around, as if to see how many other people had recognized her.
“It’s just me: Gavin.” He wondered if that made her any less wary as he stood in her path, however. They hadn’t parted on the best of terms.
Far from it. He’d been angry with himself for kissing her that day, but he’d taken some of those emotions out on her in the icy silence of the aftermath. Not one of his better moments.