Holly Bainbridge had a simple wish this Christmas: to find a way to keep Hopewell House open for business. The former foster child knew how it felt to be without a family and was determined to make this a holiday the kids would never forget. Until handsome, hard-hearted businessman Clay Forrester stole her Santa...
Playing jolly St. Nick was the best way Clay knew to make it up to Holly. And once he donned the red cap and white beard, a transformation took place—and all he could think about was being with her. But could he convince Holly that this was indeed a season of second chances? All she had to do was believe....
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Stacy Connelly dreamed of publishing books since she was a kid writing about a girl and her horse. Eventually, boys made it onto the page as she discovered a love of romance and the promise of happily-ever-after.
In 2008, that dream came true when she sold All She Wants for Christmas to Silhouette Special Edition.
When she is not lost in the land of make-believe, Stacy lives in Arizona with her two spoiled dogs.
Got some bad news, boss."
Clay Forrester looked up as his assistant ducked beneath the painter's scaffolding and played hopscotch over the electrical cords crisscrossing his office. Wallpaper swatches hung from a wall streaked with paint samples. Drop cloths protected his leather couch and chairs, but a fine layer of construction dust covered his mahogany desk. "What is it, Marie?"
Marie Cirillo opened her mouth just as the electrician started a high-powered drill. For a brief moment, the earsplitting electrical squeal seemed to emanate from his assistant. Clay choked back a laugh as she shot the construction worker an exasperated look.
The drilling stopped, and Clay asked, "Has anyone ever told you thatyou have apromising future as a ventriloquist's dummy?"
"You know, walking in here, I felt bad having to tell you this, but I'm feeling better about it now." She smirked. "Doug Frankle's sick."
His smile faded. "Our office Christmas party is in less than two hours, and our Santa is sick?"
The company party was being held two weeks before the holiday so it wouldn't interfere with family gatherings and vacations. The event was the culmination of a long, difficult year, and Clay was determined nothing would go wrong.
"Tell me we have a backup," he pleaded.
"His wife dropped off the costume if you want to substitute," Marie offered, with a cheeky grin.
Unfolding his six-foot frame from his leather chair, he ran a frustrated hand through his hair. "Do I look like a fat old man with a beard?"
"If Christmas was for the naughty instead of the nice, you're exactly what Santa Claus would look like."
"Very funny." Pulling out his wallet, Clay tossed two one-hundred-dollar bills onto his desk. "Go steal some supermarket Santa."
"You dare to bribe St. Nick?" Marie gasped in mock horror.
"Why not? Good ole St. Nick has been putting the thumbscrews to overworked parents for years. Accepting a bribe would be a step up from consumer extortion and emotional blackmail."
"You know, for a guy about to host a holiday party, you don't sound very festive." As the electrician left the office, mumbling something about splitters, she added, "You really haven't been yourself since " She shut her mouth so quickly, her teeth clinked together. That his outspoken assistant even tried to curb her tongue was proof of her worry.
"Since my father died," he filled in for her. "You can say it, Marie."
She stepped closer. "You've changed, Clay. Back when your father was running the company "
"He's not running the company anymore. I am."
Marie drew back slightly. "That's right. And you're doing a damn good job. So don't you think it's time you start living in the present again?"
"What do you think I've been doing?"
"You're locked on the future and where you want the company to go, as if you can erase where it's been."
Clay flinched at the reminder of where the company had been held tight within his father's hands. Only after Michael Forrester passed away had Clay realized how ruthless and relentless those hands could be.
"This is business, son," his father had once explained. "And business is all about the bottom line."
Growing up, Clay had accepted that statement, the same way he'd accepted that his father often missed the big game or the science fair, phoning in an excuse and leaving Clay and his sister to pretend to understand. It was business, after all, and business came first.
But not to everyone, Clay thought grimly as he recalled a confrontation several weeks after his father passed away. He'd been leaving for the day when an older man wearing a beat-up trench coat stopped him in the lobby. Taking one look at the man's bloodshot eyes and unkempt hair, Clay had assumed some bum had wandered in from the streets. Until the man called him by name.
"Where are your promises now, Forrester?" the man had demanded. "All the lies my grandchildren were foolish enough to believe about how you would ‘turn the company around'? With a little more time, the loan would have come through, and I would have turned it around. But thanks to you, I never got the chance. You went behind my back, bought out the company from my own family and sold it off piece by piece until there was nothing left. Nothing." His voice had broken on the word, and he'd pushed past Clay to rush out onto the sidewalk.
He hadn't tried to stop the man, hadn't said a thing. What was there to say? That time wouldn't have made a difference?
That no bank would give a struggling company a loan? That his father had been the one to decimate the man's business?
It was only later, on the long drive home, that Clay realized that he had no idea who the man was. That his business could have been any one of dozens.
Slowly, he was reversing the company's philosophy, from tearing down troubled companies to building them back up. His first move had been to give Kevin Hendrix, the CEO of Hendrix Properties, some practical business advice and infuse the company with capital, saving it from certain bankruptcy and assuring them both an impressive profit. He'd built on that success, certain he could change the company and his father's legacy.
"I'm trying to do what's right," Clay finally said to Marie. "And in case you've missed it, not everyone agrees."
Marie waved aside his comment. "Albert Jensen thinks only the bottom line counts."
Clay's smile twisted. "He wasn't my father's right-hand man for nothing." And while he didn't give a damn what Jensen thought, Clay couldn't escape the knowledge that his father would have disapproved.
Shaking off the dark thoughts, he said, "Look, no more business tonight. We've got a Christmas party to save. Go find someone to play Santa, and I promise to enjoy myself at the party."
"Sorry, Tiny Tim, but no can do," she responded.
"Oh, come on!" he exclaimed. "Don't tell me I've insulted your Christmas spirit."
Marie laughed. "Not quite. The caterers called. Their delivery truck broke down. I've got two dozen red-and-green cheesecakes to pick up."
"So it's a toss up between Santa and dessert?"
"Exactly. And I'm saving the cheesecake." She tossed the words over her shoulder as she strode from the office. "See you tonight." And then, as if to assure them both all was forgiven, she turned back, with a challenging glance. "And it better be in a red velvet suit."
You've changed, Clay. The accusation echoed in his mind long after Marie left. It was the same one Victoria had hurled at him the night she stormed out of their apartment and out of their marriage.
She'd been furious that he'd missed some party. "I was working," he'd argued, the excuse uneasily familiar. And even though he and Victoria had lived like strangers for the last months of their relationship, at one time she'd known him very well. Well enough to make sure her pointed comments hit their mark.
"For a man so determined not to walk in his father's shoes, you're covering some well-worn ground."
As much as Clay wanted to argue, the proof was there in the forgotten parties, the late dinners, the missed holidays.
Ever since the divorce, he'd kept his life simple, with no one to disappoint, no one to let down. No one
The office door opened again, interrupting his thoughts. The electrician reentered, toolbox and several wires in hand. "Sorry to disturb you, Mr. Forrester."
The office remodeling had taken so long, Clay had grown accustomed to the ever-present construction workers. With a sigh of frustration, he asked, "I don't suppose you know where I can find a Santa Claus?" Hearing how stupid he sounded, he vowed he would fire the electrician on the spot if the man said "The North Pole."
Setting his toolbox on the floor, the man said, "There's been a Santa in the lobby all week. In front of that flower shop."
"You're kidding." Clay walked by the flower shop on his way to the elevator every day. How had he missed a fat man in a velvet suit? Maybe Marie was right. He had focused too much on work lately. He glanced at his watch. Floral Fascinations closed at six. He still had a few minutes. "Thanks for the tip." Grabbing his jacket from the back of his chair, he said, "Are you almost finished for today?"
"I'll be done in a few minutes." A shower of sparks flared from the Christmas-colored wires. Clay shook his head and left his office, with the man's curses following him out the door.
The reception area was empty. Marie was already en route to rescue the stranded cheesecakes. A small stack of files lined the edge of her otherwise bare desk. For all her teasing remarks, she was an amazing assistant. He couldn't have managed this last year without her. No doubt the files were ones he needed first thing Monday morning.
As Clay stepped inside the elevator car, he vowed to put work aside. He needed a night to relax, and the party promised to be a good time. He'd invited the employees to the elegant Lakeshore Plaza Hotel ballroom. He had caterers and a band lined up, gifts to raffle. All he needed was a substitute Santa.
Moments later, the elevator bell chimed, and the doors slid open to reveal the elegant gray and white marble lobby. Green garlands trailed down either side of the black granite water feature. Red bows and mistletoe decorated the floor-to-ceiling marble columns. Piped-in music played Christmas carols.
And, sure enough, a red-suited St. Nick stood outside the flower shop. After a quick greeting, Clay cut to the bottom line. "I have a holiday party tonight and a sick Santa. How about a hundred dollars to fill in?"
He pulled the money from his wallet and watched the man's eyes widen above his snowy beard. Looking far more greedy than jolly, the man protested, "I already got another gig lined up."
Recognizing the negotiating tactic, Clay pulled a second bill from his wallet. "Does it pay two hundred dollars and include a meal catered by one of Chicago's finest restaurants?"
Santa snatched the money from Clay's hand.
Holly Bainbridge flipped the hanging sign to Closed, slipped out of the flower shop, and locked the door behind her. Six o'clock. She had a half an hour ...
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