“Do I get to break?” Lexi asked
Letter to Reader
Title Page
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Epilogue
Copyright
“Do I get to break?” Lexi asked
“Not literally,” Spencer answered with a smile.
Lexi was still laughing when she positioned the ball, then bent over the table, trying to remember how to hold the cue. But she hadn’t anticipated the full sexual awareness that would flood through her when Spencer ever so casually leaned over her to correct her position. She shifted slightly, bringing more of him in contact with her body.
“Okay, now shoot,” he instructed.
“Do I have to?” She sighed. It looked like all good things must come to an end.
He chuckled, then gently lifted a wisp of her hair away from her face. Tingles zinged down the side of her neck, and sharply pulling the pool cue back, she horribly overcompensated. Lexi heard the “oomph” sound Spencer made when the cue met his stomach—or worse.
“Ohmigosh!” She jerked upright and her head crunched against his.
“Oh...I’m so sorry!” Before she realized what she was doing, she found herself rubbing his stomach about where she judged the cue’s point of impact to be.
“Too high.” When she moved her hand lower, he inhaled loudly and grabbed her wrist. “Still too high, but thanks for the thought.”
Dear Reader,
Season’s Greetings! May your holidays be serene, your gifts elegantly within budget, all toys preassembled, your home lavishly decorated, your eggnog have plenty of kick, the extra calories you’ve eaten magically evaporate, your dinner guests congenial, your goose perfectly cooked, and may the dishes be washed by someone else, preferably your very own Texas man.
But if you find that all is not quite this vision of holiday perfection, don’t despair! Put your feet up, grab a hot toddy and read the Christmas scenes in Mr. December. You’ll definitely feel superior!
Happy Holidays,
Heather MacAllister
Heather MacAllister
MR. DECEMBER
TORONTO • NEW YORK • LONDON
AMSTERDAM • PARIS • SYDNEY • HAMBURG
STOCKHOLM • ATHENS • TOKYO • MILAN • MADRID
PRAGUE • WARSAW • BUDAPEST • AUCKLAND
With thanks to Christina Dodd,
Jolie Kramer and Jan Freed,
who can be brilliant when they have to be,
and to Susan Macias, whose brilliance we miss.
1
“AND I WAS FEELING so lucky today, too.” Lexi Jordan hung up the telephone and erased her mother’s message on the answering machine.
She and her roommate, Francesca, had just been booked as the musical entertainment for two private holiday parties at the Wainright Inn next weekend, which meant Lexi could finish her Christmas shopping without maxing out her credit card—enough to put holiday cheer into anyone.
And then her mother had called.
“What’s up chez Jordan?” Francesca’s voice echoed off the tile in their bathroom, where she was hanging up her underwear to dry.
“Gretchen has a new therapist.”
“Your sister always has a new therapist.”
“But this one has convinced Mom to gather everyone for Christmas dinner.” Lexi wandered from the telephone and stood in the doorway watching her roommate. “She wants me to bring a man.”
“Chef? Butler? Entertainment?”
“Significant.”
Francesca raised her eyebrows as she unrolled a towel. “Oooh.”
Lexi’s roommate had an extensive collection of pricey lingerie that required hand washing with a special detergent she ordered from a catalog.
Lexi wore cotton for its breathable qualities.
Once, Francesca had pointed out that silk was also a natural fiber, but Lexi had countered that its breathing quality had been canceled out by the unnatural shapes into which it had been sewn.
“And do you have a significant man I don’t know about?”
“I don’t even have an insignificant one.” Lexi considered the men she knew. Nothing but casual date material. And things were likely to remain the status quo as long as she and Francesca performed at the Wainright Inn in Rocky Falls, Texas on the two hot date nights of the week. “And even if I did find a man, I’d probably alienate him by subjecting him to a family therapy session.”
“I thought you said Christmas dinner.”
“Did I fail to mention that Gretchen’s therapist feels she has unresolved abandonment issues from her childhood?”
“This sounds good. Keep talking.” Francesca grinned and picked up a black-and-rose bra from the towel. At least Lexi thought it was a bra. There wasn’t a whole lot to identify.
She leaned against the doorjamb. “Well, this woman told Gretchen that our parents were emotionally remote and more interested in the welfare of the arts community than in Gretchen. Can you believe it?”
Francesca met Lexi’s eyes in the mirror over the sink. “Kinda.”
“Frankie! Get real. Who do you think is paying for Gretchen’s therapy? Besides, I don’t have a problem with my parents.”
“Uh...”
Lexi grimaced and waved her hand. “Other than the normal stuff. They were around. They spent a lot of time with me, and they always came to my recitals when I was little. They still come. They aren’t emotionally remote. I could just smack Gretchen.”
Francesca hung up more pieces of the black-and-rose set, then fished out a dark swirl of fabric from the sink. “Gretchen is tone-deaf. She can’t sing, and she can’t play the piano.”
“So?”
“So there weren’t any recitals for your parents to attend. Maybe they did ignore her.”
Lexi mentally flipped through her childhood memories of her little sister. “Gretchen’s a whiner. She’s impossible to ignore.” And this latest scheme was an attention-getting ploy if ever Lexi saw one.
Francesca laughed as she squeezed out the dark blob and set it on the edge of the sink. “Why Christmas dinner?”
“Gretchen has no happy childhood memories, so we’re supposed to create one for her now.”
“Actually, that doesn’t sound so awful. I think it’s sweet.”
Francesca wasn’t nearly as much fun when she was being logical. Lexi’s personal opinion was that humoring Gretchen only encouraged her. “Not sweet. Mother wants to prove we’re a normal, happy, well-adjusted, successful family.”
Francesca snickered. “Which one is she trying for?”
Lexi drew a deep breath. “All of them. I tried to convince her to abandon the adjectives and just concentrate on the family part, but she insisted. And get this—Les is coming.”
Francesca whirled around and knocked the tan-and-black-striped lump back into the water. “Your brother? The gray sheep?”
That was better. They both dissolved into laughter. Lexi’s twin brother’s rebellions were varied, and short-lived. “Poor Les. He wants to be a black sheep so bad, but every time he comes home, he gets bleached.”
“I can’t believe your mother managed to get him to come home for Christmas.”
Lexi could. “She’s got me looking for a date, hasn’t she?”
“I don’t get it. Why?”
“Because Gretchen’s a mess and Mom’s afraid who Les might bring.”
Francesca gave her a long-suffering look. “Because I am your
very best friend...he could bring me.”
“Thanks for the sacrifice, but wrong gender.”
“No way!”
“Way. At least that’s what he said last time he called.”
“He probably just said that to get back at your parents for naming him Leslie.”
That’s what Lexi thought. “Well, it worked.”
“I guess so.” Francesca scooped out the underwear and let it drip. “But what I really meant was why does it matter if you have a date or not? It’s supposed to be a family dinner, right?”
And that was the problem. This time, family would include Lexi’s Aunt Carolyn, who had, according to Lexi’s mother, achieved the perfect life. “I think the date is supposed to steal Aunt Carolyn’s thunder on the lack-of-grandchildren issue. She and my uncle, and, it appears, my perfect cousin and her equally perfect husband and children will also be there.”
In the mirror, Francesca’s eyes widened and she squeezed water down the front of her sweater. “Emily DeSalvo is coming to Rocky Falls?”
Did she have to act like it was such a big deal? “So it would seem.”
“Oh, my...how can she rearrange her schedule this close to Christmas?”
“That’s why she’s perfect,” Lexi said evenly.
Or maybe not so evenly.
Francesca blinked at her. “Lexi, you’re not still jealous of her, are you?”
“I was never jealous of her.”
“I mean, it’d be okay if you were. She’s...she’s...” As Lexi’s gritted-teeth expression finally registered, Francesca turned back to the sink, obviously deciding to quit while she was ahead.
“She’s a world-famous soprano just now reaching her professional peak, while I’m a mere associate professor of piano at a small college in the hinterlands of Texas? Is that what you were about to say?”
There was a short silence. “I wouldn’t have said ‘hinterlands.’”
Lexi sighed.
“Oh, come on. You can’t compare yourself to her.”
“Mother does.” Lexi half smiled. “You know, I used to accompany Emily at recitals when we were little.”
Francesca’s eyes brightened. “Was she...I mean, could you tell she was really good back then?”
Lexi nodded. “Yeah. I was no slouch, either, but once people heard her sing...” She trailed off, remembering how she’d practice and practice, but Emily’s soaring voice would effortlessly eclipse her time and again.
Come to think of it, maybe her parents weren’t at the recitals to hear Lexi play after all. Maybe they’d come to hear Emily sing. She frowned.
“Hey.”
Lexi discovered Francesca looking at her with a little too much perception.
“We’ll have to find you a real hunk for Christmas. Like him.” She nodded to the Science Hunks calendar hung up beside the mirror.
A bare-chested Santa with an attitude glared at them. And glare was the right description. While most of the men in the calendar had tried for sexy come-ons, this man’s expression dared women to take him on.
And Francesca wanted to meet the challenge. She was intrigued with the guy. In the mornings, Lexi could hear her talk to him as she put on her makeup. Lexi admitted that the man had a certain unnerving allure, which hadn’t been lessened by the lipstick mouthprint Francesca had left on his cheek.
“There he is, Lexi,” she said, making kissing sounds. “A giant piece of male eye candy for Emily to drool over.”
- Emily wouldn’t be the only one. Lexi had generally avoided Mr. December’s accusing stare, but that didn’t mean she avoided looking at him elsewhere. He had well-shaped hands with long fingers. People in Lexi’s profession noticed fingers. Still, she bet she was the only woman who looked past the broad, lightly furred chest, flat stomach and muscled shoulders to notice his fingers.
“What do you think?” Francesca asked, her dimples showing. “He’d be perfect, right?”
“I know it’s the season of miracles, but really.”
“I keep telling you, it’s all a matter of the right underwear.”
Lexi stared at the calendar picture. “I have a feeling it’ll take more than underwear to nab this guy.”
“That’s why I wrote to him.”
“You didn’t!”
Grinning, Francesca retrieved the last of her laundry and drained the water from the sink. “Of course I did. And sent him a picture.”
Lexi closed her eyes. “Not the one of you naked with your cello.”
“Just to let him know that when I have a fine instrument between my legs, I know how to play it.”
“Francesca!”
“You should write to one of those calendar cuties yourself,” suggested her unrepentant roommate.
Lexi stared at Mr. December and imagined Emily’s envious reaction. Emily envying her. What a switch that would be. As Lexi’s lips curved in a slow smile, her mother’s horrified face popped up in the background, spoiling the fantasy. “I...don’t think any of these guys would exactly fit in with my family.”
“Not fit in? They’re scientists! These guys have brains and brawn. Aren’t we being just a wee bit picky?”
“Francesca...” How could someone be both savvy and naive at the same time? “That man is no scientist.”
“Sure he is!” Francesca rolled the last of her lingerie in a towel. “They all are. They work over at the Electronics Research Facility.”
“That white building on the other side of the falls?”
Francesca nodded.
Lexi walked over to the calendar and took it down. Paging through it, she said, “You’re telling me that this many smart, single, good-looking guys work just a few miles from here and we’ve never seen them? I don’t think so.”
“I was surprised, too, but they were written up in the fall issue of Texas Men.”
“So that’s why I’ve seen that thing all over campus.” Lexi tacked up the calendar again. “I still think there’s a catch somewhere.”
“They’re all catches.”
“You know what I mean.” She stared Mr. December right in the eyes. Was that intelligence she saw in his gaze? She looked closer. Probably the photographer’s umbrella light.
“If you want to read about them, I’ve got a copy of the magazine.” Francesca held up her long, filmy tiger-striped cat suit and draped it over the clothesline hanging above the bathtub. “I sleep with it under my pillow.”
Lexi didn’t doubt it. Because she knew Francesca expected her to say “no”—certainly not because she was in any way curious about Mr. December—she headed toward Francesca’s bedroom. “Under your pillow, you say?”
The magazine was on the nightstand, not under Francesca’s pillow, but Lexi presumed that was because she wasn’t sleeping at the moment. Lexi had seen this issue of Texas Men before—it was hard not to—but she’d only flipped through it, missing the fact that these gorgeous men worked and, therefore, must live within dating range.
She sat on the edge of the bed, smiling when the magazine fell open to Mr. December, or rather Dr. December. Yeah, right. “What lucky woman wouldn’t like to find Mr. December in her stocking?” she read. In the background, she heard the telephone ring.
“I’ll get it!” Francesca warbled. Lexi winced. Her roommate was no soprano.
“Spencer Price, our favorite Santa Claus, holds his doctorate in mechanical engineering.... Lexi stared at Dr. Spencer Price, not certain whether or not she liked knowing his name. It made him more intimidating somehow. And yet, at the same time, it made him human.
She began to think of the possibilities. Here was a man who would speak to her parents on one level, and speak to Emily and Aunt Carolyn on another. No more feeling-sorry-for-Lexi looks. But plenty of jealous-of-Lexi looks.
It was a lovely fantasy—almost as satisfying as the one in which she single-handedly built Littletree College into one of the premier fine arts schools in the Southwest.
And about as likely.
Lexi pa
ged through the magazine and found a 900 number to call for information on how to contact the men.
She was actually contemplating calling when Francesca appeared in the doorway. “Lexi, I can’t stand that decrepit building any longer! You know how it was raining this morning?”
Lexi nodded.
“Well, that was Dr. Biersanger’s secretary. The leak in the auditorium ceiling finally rotted the acoustic tiles and chunks fell down while the recorder ensemble was on stage.”
“Oh, no! Was anybody hurt?”
“No. But they will be unless that place is renovated.”
“Renovated?” This was one of Lexi’s hot buttons. “Do you know how many potential students and professors have passed Littletree by because of the inadequate number of practice rooms, those aging pianos and the shabby little rehearsal hall?”
“I hear you.”
“It’s getting so that I’m embarrassed every time we have a guest performer. They should raze the entire building and start again from scratch.”
“So why don’t you get your father to throw some of his foundation money our way?”
Lexi glared at her. Francesca had just broken the unspoken rule. Lexi’s father and his connection to the Cultural Arts Foundation was off-limits.
Sighing, Francesca held up her hands, palms outward. “Sorry. But it’s beginning to look like he’s our best shot.”
Unfortunately, Lexi knew Francesca was only voicing common public opinion around the Little-tree music department. Naturally, no one had ever flat-out told Lexi that she’d been hired because she was the daughter of Lawrence Jordan, well-known arts philanthropist, but as the music building deteriorated, there had been a few subtle comments. Then a few not-so-subtle comments.
But she’d really felt the pressure when Dr. Biersanger, the music department chairman, had stopped introducing her as Emily DeSalvo’s cousin and started introducing her to prospective students and faculty as Lawrence Jordan’s daughter.
Mr. December Page 1