Merry Ex-Mas. Sheila Roberts
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Merry Ex-Mas - Sheila Roberts страница 12

Название: Merry Ex-Mas

Автор: Sheila Roberts

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781472054715

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ Blue-eyed, blond-haired Cecily was the beauty of the family, but with her red hair and freckles, Samantha wasn’t exactly a troll. She’d married Blake Preston, the bank’s manager, in August and still sported a newlywed glow. That would wear off eventually.

      Listen to you, Cass scolded herself. Queen of the cynics.

      “We brought vitamin C,” Samantha said, handing over a holiday box of Sweet Dreams Chocolates.

      Chocolate, the other Vitamin C, and a girl’s best friend. “This takes care of me. I don’t know what the rest of you are having,” Cass joked. “Did you bring the movie?”

      Cecily held up the DVD with Nicolas Cage on the cover. “We’re set.”

      Ella was the next to arrive. She wasn’t as beautiful as her glamorous mother, Lily Swan, but she was cute and she knew how to dress. Tonight she looked ready for a magazine shoot in skinny jeans paired with a crisp white shirt, a black leather vest and a long, metallic red scarf, and bearing a bowl of parmesan popcorn, her specialty. Ella even did popcorn with flair.

      Cass decided that flair was something you either soaked up in the gene pool or you didn’t. She could create works of art in her bakery, but when it came to personal style she couldn’t seem to get beyond unimpressionist. Oh, well. What did she care? She didn’t have anyone she needed to impress.

      Not even your ex-in-laws?

      No, she told herself firmly. Living well was the best revenge and she was living quite well, thank you. She didn’t need to look like a cover model to prove it.

      She pushed aside the thought of Babette, who would, of course, show up for the wedding with her hair perfectly highlighted and her skinny little bod draped in something flattering. Maybe Cass would pass on the chocolate and popcorn tonight.

      Charley was the last to arrive. She came bearing wine and looked frazzled enough to consume the entire bottle single-handed.

      “Okay, what’s wrong?” Cass asked once the women were settled in the living room with their drinks and goodies.

      “Richard’s back.” Charley took one of Cass’s gingerbread boys and bit off his head.

      Cass nearly dropped her wineglass. “What?”

      Charley nodded. More of the gingerbread boy disappeared.

      “Why is he back?” Cass asked. “What does he want?”

      “Me,” Charley said.

      “You? He left you for another woman! Tell him to take a hike off the mountain,” Samantha advised.

      Cass couldn’t have said it better herself. “I’ll second that.”

      “So he’s left Ariel?” Cecily asked.

      “He says it was all a mistake.”

      Men always said that when they got caught with their pants down. Cass frowned. “Not as big a mistake as taking him back would be.”

      “You’re not going to, are you?” asked Samantha.

      “Absolutely not,” Charley shook her head vigorously.

      “Good for you,” Cass said. Charley had the kind of never-ending legs that made men drool and gorgeous long hair and plenty of personality. She didn’t have to settle for letting a loser back in her life.

      “Did you tell him that?” Samantha asked.

      “Of course I did.”

      “Then why is he still here?” Samantha persisted.

      Charley was on her second gingerbread boy now. “He says he’s not giving up.”

      “Oh, brother,” Ella said, rolling her eyes.

      “Why is it men only want you when you don’t want them?” Charley grumbled.

      “Because they’re bums,” Cass said.

      “Not all of them,” Samantha murmured.

      “Blake is the exception to the rule,” Cass told her.

      “There are other exceptions out there,” Cecily added.

      “Like Luke Goodman?” her sister teased.

      “Like Luke,” Cecily agreed, her voice neutral.

      Ella sighed. “So why do we always like the bad boys?”

      Charley sighed, too. “Because we’re masochists?”

      “There’s something about bad boys,” Cecily said, then seeing her sister’s frown, got busy inspecting a lock of hair for split ends.

      “Yeah, something bad,” her sister said firmly. “Men like Richard and Todd Black are nothing but heartbreak on two legs.”

      “I wasn’t talking about Todd,” Cecily said, her cheeks pink.

      “I was,” Samantha said.

      Cecily grabbed a handful of popcorn. “I don’t know about the rest of you, but I’m ready to watch the movie.”

      With Samantha in bossy older sister mode that was understandable. Cass started the movie.

      As the plot unfolded, chronicling the life of the fictional Jack Campbell, she couldn’t help thinking of her own choices, of Mason. What if they’d been given a glimpse of a better future, one where they stayed united and lived as best friends instead of combatants? What would her life look like now?

      What did it matter? She and Mason had made their choices and no hip angel was going to drop into their lives to give them a second chance. The best glimpse she could get was one of her daughter’s wedding going smoothly, of herself managing to be civil. If she could pull that off, it would be a miracle.

      * * *

      What a wonderful movie. And what a wonderful way to start the holidays. Ella was teary-eyed by the end of it. She always cried at movies. She cried over movies with sad endings because she felt so bad for the poor people. A movie with a happy ending, especially a romantic movie, brought her to tears because, well, it was all so overwhelmingly hopeful. Somewhere out there in the real world a man could be coming to his senses, realizing that he didn’t need to go off in search of El Dorado, that there was gold right in his own backyard. Maybe like the Jack Campbell character, Charley’s husband had figured that out.

      Jake had insisted he had, that Ella was all he needed.

      What big fat lies! Thank God her mother had opened her eyes to the truth. Otherwise, she’d have wasted the best years of her life, keeping the home fires burning on a shoestring budget while he carried on with other women.

      “Well.” Cass raised her glass. “Here’s to the Jack Campbells of the world, wherever they’re hiding.”

      “I’ll drink to that. I found mine,” Samantha said.

      “And СКАЧАТЬ