
One Christmas Wish
A Catalina Cove Novel
by Brenda Jackson
ISBN: 9781335201980
Publication Date: October 26, 2021
Publisher: HQN Books
Blurb:
Itβs Christmas in Catalina Cove, a time of promise and second chances. But when youβre starting over, love is the last thing youβre wishing forβ¦
Vaughn Millerβs Wall Street career was abruptly ended by a wrongful conviction and two years in prison. Since then, heβs returned to his hometown, kept his head down and forged a way forward. When he is exonerated and his name cleared, he feels he can hold his head up once again, maybe even talk to the beautiful cafΓ© owner who sets his blood to simmering.
Sierra Crane escaped a disastrous marriageβbarely. She and her six-year-old goddaughter have returned to the only place that feels like home. Determined to make it on her own, Sierra opens a soup cafΓ©. Complication is the last thing she needs, but the moment Vaughn walks into her cafΓ©, she canβt keep her eyes off the smoldering loner.
When they give in to their attraction, what Sierra thought would be a onetime thing becomes so much more. Vaughn knows sheβs the one. Sierra canβt deny the way Vaughn makes her feel, but sheβs been burned before. With Christmas approaching, Vaughn takes a chance to prove his love, and it will be up to Sierra to decide if her one Christmas wishβtrue happinessβwill come true.
*****
Excerpt:
1
SIERRA CRANE CRINGED every time her ex-husband called. Their marriage had ended almost two years ago, so why couldnβt he get on with his life the way she had gotten on with hers? She hadnβt heard from him since the divorce and now this was the second phone call in a month.
And why did he always manage to call her at the worst time? The dinner crowd was arriving at her soup cafΓ©, the Green Fig, and she was short a waitress tonight. The last thing she needed to be doing was talking on the phone to her ex.
βWhat is it now, Nathan?β she asked, trying to keep her voice low to avoid being overheard by the customers coming in.
βYou know what I want, Sierra. We rushed into our divorce and I want a reconciliation. We didnβt even seek counseling.β
She rolled her eyes. It wasnβt as if counseling would have helped their marriage. She had put up with things for as long as she could, and had to remove herself from that toxic environment. His infidelity had been the last straw, and then there had been his total lack of sensitivity when her best friend Rhonda Andrews was dying.
βWhy are we even discussing this, Nathan? You know as well as I do that no amount of counseling would have helped our marriage. You betrayed me. I caught you in the act. Look, Iβm busy,β she said when she saw customers waiting to be seated. βAnd do me a favor and donβt call back. Our divorce is final, and I intend for it to stay that way. Goodbye.β She clicked off the phone and, for good measure, she blocked his number.
Moving from behind the counter, she assisted her staff in seating customers and taking orders. It was an hour later when the dinner rush had ended that she found the time to go into her office and work on tomorrowβs menu. The monitor screen on her desk was connected to a video camera showing the perimeters of the dining area. If she was needed to assist her staff again, she would know it.
She sat in the chair behind her desk thinking about Nathanβs call. The nerve of him thinking they could get back together. Not only had he cheated on her but he had resented all the trips sheβd taken from Chicago to Houston to spend time with Rhonda in her final days. It hadnβt mattered to him that Rhonda was terminally ill and there had been so much to do and so little time left.
The main focus had been the well-being of Rhondaβs four-year-old daughter, Teryn, whoβd lost her father two years earlier in Afghanistan. Without family on both sides, Sierra was Terynβs godmother and Rhonda had made Sierra promise to take care of Teryn when the time came. Nathan, whoβd never wanted children, had been resentful of that, too.
It had been one of those weekends sheβd visited Rhonda in Houston and sheβd returned home early to find another couple, namely her neighbors, in bed with her husband. Thatβs when sheβd found out about his swinging lifestyle. Heβd confessed it was something he had tried during his college days but thought he had put behind him…until he had discovered their new neighbors had enjoyed doing that sort of thing.
When Sierra had filed for divorce, Nathan assumed if he kept sending her flowers, calling her all the time, and showing up unexpectedly at her new residence with chocolates, designer purses and jewelry, he could wear down her resistance and she would call off the divorce. He finally saw that wasnβt happening.
An hour later Sierra left her office to return to the dining area. It was time for her only waitress on the floor tonight to take her break. Sierra had just stepped behind the counter when the sound of the bell above the door alerted her that she had a customer.
The Green Fig, which served lunch and dinner Mondays through Fridays, had been open for business for only a year. The restaurant closed every night at eight. Most of her customers were locals whoβd known her grandmother and were happy that Ella Crane had passed her delicious soup recipes on to her granddaughter.
Sierra had a good staff. Sheβd hired Emma, whoβd been a friend of her motherβs for years, as head cook and Maxine, whoβd graduated from the New Orleans cooking school last year, as Emmaβs assistant. Normally there were two waitresses, Iris and Opal, who handled the dining room, and Sherri took care of the take-out orders. On any given day there were more take-out orders than sit-down orders, especially during lunch.
Sheβd hired Levi Canady as the assistant manager. An ex-cop whoβd retired early from the force due to an injury, he was also a good friend of Sierraβs father from their elementary school days. Levi was a godsend and would take over for Sierra whenever Teryn came home from school. He managed the restaurant every night except on Wednesdays. He also opened and closed for her on Saturdays, when the restaurant was open only for lunch. Whenever Teryn had gymnastics practice Sierra would help out in the cafΓ© until she got home. Today was one of those days.
Sierra glanced at the door and saw Vaughn Miller walk in, dressed in a business suit. On any other man the outfit would probably look like just regular professional attire, but on him it appeared tailor-made. He was a very handsome man and looking good in anything he wore was just part of who he was.
Sierra didnβt know Vaughn personally, although they had both been born in Catalina Cove and had attended the same schools. She hadnβt had the right pedigree to be in his social circles since his family had been one of the wealthiest in town. They had come from old money, probably as old as it could get in the cove when you were a descendant of the townβs founder.
When Vaughn Miller took a seat at one of the booths, she grabbed a menu out of the rack and headed to his table. Heβd come in once or twice before, but it had always been for takeout. It appeared that today he intended to dine in.
βWelcome to the Green Fig.β
He looked up when she handed him the menu. βThanks.β
This was the closest she had ever been to Vaughn Miller and she couldnβt help noticing things she hadnβt seen from a distance. Like the beautiful hazel coloring of his eyes. He had sharp cheekbones and she liked the way his nose was the perfect size for his face and the full lips beneath it. And speaking of lips…did his have to be of such sensual perfection? And then she couldnβt miss the light beard that covered his lower jaw and how it enhanced those lips but didnβt hide the dimple in his chin.
Vaughnβs skin was a maple brown and he wore his thick black hair long. It wasnβt down past his shoulders like Kaegan Chambrayβs, but it was long enough to touch his collar. To her the long and tousled hairstyle did much to highlight his French Creole ancestry.
The Creoles derived from free people of color from Africa, France and Spain, as well as other mixed-heritage descendants. Those blended races and cultures were a large population of Louisiana, and more specifically, New Orleans, Catalina Cove and other surrounding cities.
Sierra had to concur with the feminine whispers around town that Vaughn Miller was a very handsome man and a sharp dresser, yet she noted he had a definite rugged masculine appeal. Even dressed nicely in a suit, all you had to do was add a tricorne hat on his head and a loop earring in his ear and he would instantly become a dashing pirate. A look that no doubt would make his great-great-great-great-grandfather, the coveβs founder, Jean Lafitte, proud.
She knew six years ago heβd been sent to prison for a crime he didnβt commit. Three months ago, articles appeared in numerous newspapers reporting on his exoneration and how those who were guilty had been brought to justice. He had been cleared of all charges.
βWhatβs the special for today?β
She blinked upon realizing sheβd been standing there staring at him the entire time. Clearing her throat, she said, βTodayβs special is the broccoli and cheese soup and itβs served with a half sandwich. Turkey or chicken.β
He smiled up at her and that smile made his features even more beguiling and clearly showed that dimple in his chin. βThat sounds good. Iβd like a bowl with a chicken sandwich.β
She wrote his order down on the pad and noticed his French accent. She recalled overhearing her parents say that his mother had been French and his father mixed French and African American, and that French had been the primary language spoken in the Miller household. She also remembered hearing while growing up he would spend his summers in France as well with his grandparents. That was probably the reason the accent was still strong after all this time.
βWhat would you like to drink?β
βBrown ale.β
Sierra nodded. βOkay, Iβll put in your order and get your ale.β
βThanks.β
She turned and walked toward the kitchen. When she knew she was out of his sight and that of customers and staff, she fanned herself with the menu. Vaughn Miller had definitely made every hormone in her body sizzle.
One Christmas Wish by Brenda Jackson.
Copyright Β© 2021 by Brenda Streater Jackson.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
*****
Author Info:
Brenda Jackson is a New York Times bestselling author of more than one hundred romance titles. Brenda lives in Jacksonville, Florida, and divides her time between family, writing and traveling.
Facebook: @BrendaJacksonAuthor
Twitter: @AuthorBJackson
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