Harlequin Holiday Collection
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Harlequin Holiday Collection: Four Classic Seasonal Novellas
Leslie Kelly
Merline Lovelace
Debra Webb
Marta Perry
Harlequin Holiday Collection: Four Classic Seasonal Novellas
A struggling B&B owner scrambles to hide the dead body wrapped in her Christmas tree from a visiting camera crew—and from her still-irresistible reporter ex. A waitress and a sexy FBI agent mix business with pleasure while investigating a crime over the holidays. A crime lab worker finds herself in danger six days before Christmas…and only her off-limits but oh-so-attractive coworker can help. And two childhood friends rediscover their sense of wonder—and love—when reunited for the holidays.
Discover these four classic seasonal novellas:
And a Dead Guy in a Pear Tree by Leslie Kelly
Seduced by the Season by Merline Lovelace
Evidence of Desire by Debra Webb
Season of Wonder by Marta Perry
Contents
And a Dead Guy in a Pear Tree
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Seduced by the Season
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Evidence of Desire
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Season of Wonder
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
And a Dead Guy in a Pear Tree
by Leslie Kelly
Chapter One
With a crew from a Chicago-area travel show arriving in mere hours to do a story on Holly Cavanaugh’s struggling B&B, the last thing she wanted to see was a dead guy on her living room floor.
Well, maybe not the very last thing. An eviction notice on the door—that would be awful. Or, the expression on her grandfather’s face if they lost his family home. That’d be worse.
But a stiff on the floor was pretty damn close.
“Oh my God. Is that what I think it is?” Regina Bates, Holly’s maid asked. Her heavily shadowed eyes had grown to the size of Frisbees.
“If you’re thinking it’s a corpse, then yes.” Holly couldn’t believe the calmness of her tone, especially because her heart was cart-wheeling in her chest.
Other than it, the Hollyberry Inn looked postcard-perfect. From the laurel wreath on the door, to the loops of greenery festooning the foyer, to the sheen on the freshly-polished oak floors, the whole place exuded warmth and holiday cheer. Each immaculate room invited people to visit—now.
Well, each room except this one—the room where the dead guy had just fallen out of the Christmas tree.
“Are we, like, on some practical-joke TV show?”
“I don’t think so.”
Too bad. When they’d cut the tight, plastic binding off the huge fir and a body had fallen from its branches, their expressions had probably been Emmy-worthy.
But a TV crew couldn’t have set this up. They couldn’t have known her grandfather would come in here last night and—against express orders—jack up the radiator so it fried Holly’s perfectly decorated Christmas tree, leaving needles in a thick moat around it. Nor could they have known she’d dash to the nearest tree lot and buy a replacement without even looking at it. She’d been so panicked, she’d just demanded the tallest one they had, not even wasting a few precious minutes to have them unbind it. And they couldn’t have counted on her and Regina dragging the monstrous tree inside, putting it in the stand and then cutting off the binding so Mr. Corpse could tumble down, crashing against the nativity set, sending a heavenly angel flying and Baby Jesus spinning.
Baby Jesus was okay, thank God. But that was more than she could say for the man sprawled at her feet.
“Are you sure he’s dead?” Regina asked. Holly didn’t exactly consider herself an expert, but judging by the stiffness of the guy and his wide-open eyes, she felt pretty confident. The short-statured man’s skin was bluish, but otherwise there wasn’t a mark on him. “He’s dead,” Holly confirmed.
“Do you think he fell into that tree binding machine?” Regina asked. Her face paled even beneath her Goth makeup. “My boyfriend worked at a tree lot last year and he and his buddies used to dare each other to dive through one.”
Having met said boyfriend, she was impressed that he’d had the brains to refuse.
“They never died or nothin’.”
Scratch that.
“I’d better go call 911,” Holly murmured, though a big part of her recoiled at the idea. Calling 911 would mean police and ambulances and inquiries. All her work would be destroyed by crime scene tape and the swarm of law enforcement who would inevitably follow.
It was a scene out of CSI—not the featured story on the Weekend Getaways show, the special that was supposed to save them all.
Turning her grandfather’s century-old, historic mansion into a bed and breakfast had been Holly’s idea. It was supposed to help them hold onto it, but they’d had to mortgage heavily. If they didn’t get some serious business coming in, the bank would foreclose on that mortgage. Her grandparents would be homeless.
So, with no bookings at the busiest travel time of the year, Holly cold-called the travel show and got her first break. They’d scheduled the taping and Holly had believed that her luck was turning—until the dead guy fell out of the tree. No TV crew would film around cops, rescue vehicles and corpses. And even if she could get the producer to reschedule, it would be too late. Her grandparents would lose everything.
And it would be entirely Holly’s fault.
Chapter Two
Zach Weldon was, of course, not the only reporter covering the robbery of millions in loose stones from a Chicago diamond importer—but he was the only one with an advantage. A detective friend had tipped him to the last known address of one of the suspects, knowing Zach had once lived in that
same town. Naturally, it was pure quid pro quo. Zach would have to call in right away if he actually found anything.
His friend said that the Chicago PD had ruled out the connection, but Zach figured a lead was a lead—which was why he was currently in Wheaton, Illinois, the dinky town he’d lived in during high school. His father had died shortly after he’d left for college and his mother had remarried and moved away. The one other reason he’d had for returning to visit had dumped him. So he’d never gone back.
He sometimes wondered what had happened to her…that one reason. Considering Holly Cavanaugh had punched him the last time he saw her, he doubted she’d be up for a reunion. God, how could he have been stupid enough to let her get away?
Enough. He had a story to cover.
Though he’d never have dreamed it possible, he hit pay dirt almost immediately. Spying an elderly man unloading fresh trees at a temporary Christmas tree lot, he’d shown him a photo of Fred Kipling, a “person of interest” in the robbery. And was stunned by the response.
“Yessir, that looks like it could be him. Surly fella. Had a gun on him.”
“He pulled a gun on you?”
“No, I held a gun on him. I came here late last night and found him inside the lot, wrestling with one of the twelve footers, trying to steal it.”
Zach had a hard time picturing a pair of wanted robbers stopping to pick out a nice Douglas fir. “Was he alone?” He grabbed another picture, a mug-shot of Kipling’s partner, Leo “Teenie” Meaney, who was half Kipling’s size…and had twice his temper. “Was this guy with him?”
The old man glanced at the photo, shook his head and hacked a phlegmy cough. “Nope. Feller was alone. ’Tween me and my shotgun, we let him know what we think of thieves around here.”
He wondered what the old man would say if he learned he’d confronted a pretty ruthless one.
“He said he’d pay for it, but didn’t have enough cash so he was coming back today with the rest. Problem was, when he came back for the tree, it’d been sold.”
“He was already here?”
Nodding, the man hacked again, then spat on the ground. My, how Zach missed these small town niceties.
“My grandson’s a good, strong boy, but don’t he have a head like a rock? He didn’t see the red ribbon that meant the tree’d been reserved and he let somebody else have it.”
“Where did he go?”
“Probably hunting up some breakfast. He’s a healthy eater, that boy….”
“I meant the angry man,” Zach snapped.
“Dunno. Said he had to have that tree and wanted to know who bought it.”
“You didn’t tell him!”
The man shook his head, causing Zach to sigh in relief. It sounded as though Kipling had hidden something in the tree. The diamonds perhaps? And if so, whoever had ended up with it could be standing between a dangerous criminal and his loot.
“But my grandson did. Like I said—noggin like a boulder.”
Zach managed to hide his frustration, though his jaw was clenched hard enough to break his teeth. “Who did buy the tree?” he bit out.
The man smiled. “Nice lady. Runs the new inn out on Mill Road, on the north shore of the lake. She’s…”
Zach didn’t wait for the man to finish. He was already hurrying to his car, concerned about the “nice lady” who might be getting a visit from a murderous criminal.
He only hoped he wasn’t too late.
“Oh my God, someone’s at the door!”
Holly Cavanaugh wondered if she looked as terrified as her maid, Regina, did. They were, after all, standing above a dead body that had fallen out of a Christmas tree. A TV crew from the Chicago show Weekend Getaways would be arriving in two hours. And now they had an unexpected visitor.
“Get rid of whoever it is while I…” Stash the stiff? Call the police? Run and hide?
When the maid came back, she looked even more panicked. “It’s them!”
“Who?”
“The TV people! They’re early! I answered the door and this dude says he’s a reporter….”
This couldn’t be happening. “Where is he?”
“I shut the door and came to warn you.”
Oh joy—a great first impression for the critics. She had to think quickly. Call the police? Or save the inn?
It was a no-brainer.
“I’ll keep the reporter busy. You go get Manny. He’s working on the furnace. Have him help you move this guy into the storage shed.” Swallowing hard as she realized what she intended to do, she added, “We’ll call the police the minute they leave.”
She was going to burn in hell for this. Or go to jail. Somehow though, she managed to paste a calm expression on her face. At least until she opened the front door and saw the tall, dark-haired man on her front porch. Then she did exactly what her erstwhile maid had done.
She slammed the door right in Zach Weldon’s face.
Chapter Three
Zach Weldon had been more than a little surprised when a heavily pierced, pale-faced brunette wearing all black had slammed the door to the Hollyberry Inn in his face. But when a sweet-faced redhead did exactly the same thing one minute later, he was stunned.
Because he recognized that sweet-faced redhead.
“Holly?” He knocked on the door, hard, wondering if his heart was racing because it was her—the only girl he’d ever regretted losing—or because he was worried that an armed jewel thief was already inside the house. A hostage situation might explain the door slamming.
But then, so could the fact she thought he was a cheating dog.
“Open the door, Holly!”
After a long pause, she did, peering around the corner of the oak door and studying him head to toe. “It’s you.”
“Yeah.”
She looked good. Incredibly good. Her strawberry-blond hair had darkened to near auburn and it hung in a silky curtain around her shoulders. Her green eyes were so wide that he could see the tiny flecks of gold in the iris. And though more mature, her face still had the slightly upturned nose and a smattering of freckles across her high cheekbones.
The one thing missing was that brilliant smile, the one thing that had reduced his usual smooth-talking teenage self into the verbal equivalent of a foreign exchange student. Now, it was conspicuous in its absence.
“This is your grandparents’ house, isn’t it,” Zach said, not really asking since he knew it was true. Holly had brought him out here to meet them a couple of times when they were dating, but today, he’d been so preoccupied with finding out if a dangerous jewel thief was around, he hadn’t even registered the location or even looked at the building until she’d answered the door.
“Yes,” she murmured. “Now it’s an inn. Are you really…my maid said you’re a reporter?”
He nodded. “I am.”
“What did I do to deserve this?” Nibbling her lip, she half-lowered her lashes and mumbled something that sounded suspiciously like, “Other than that.”
Before he could ask what she meant, Holly slipped outside onto the porch. She tugged the door shut behind her, having to move close since he blocked her path. Only a few inches of cold, winter air separated them.
If he were a gentleman, he’d step back, giving her more space. But he wasn’t. And if Holly Cavanaugh couldn’t stand the heat, she shouldn’t have stepped so close and turned his entire body into a blazing furnace.
“Of all people, why in God’s name did it have to be you?”
“You’re not happy to see me. I’m crushed,” he murmured, unable to prevent a tiny smile. The Holly he remembered had always been cheerful—except that last night when she’d found him passed out at a buddy’s house. With his ex-girlfriend lying beside him.
On that occasion, sweet little Holly had been a kick-ass, violent tornado.
“You’re early.”
He quirked a confused brow.
“I mean, we’re not quite ready yet.”
He glanced at the
closed door, wondering what was behind her odd behavior. An inn not ready to greet guests? Or a desperate, armed criminal trying to find the loot he’d stashed in a Christmas tree?
“I think you’d better let me inside.”
The last thing Holly wanted to do was spend one minute with Zach Weldon, the first guy—the only guy—she’d ever really loved. But if he was here to do the story on the inn, she had no choice. Considering the number of tears she’d shed over Zach, inviting him back into her life would be downright stupid. But foreclosure? That would be worse.
“Let’s tour the grounds first. Where’s the rest of your crew?”
“My crew?”
“Oh, is that why you’re early? To get the lay of the land first? If so, let’s start outside…it’s, uh, a beautiful day.”
It was a flipping brutal day, so cold her fingertips were already numb and her nipples had turned into two rock-hard spikes against her thin sweater. Only the cold. Her body’s reaction had nothing to do with his nearness.
If only she could convince herself of that. Because, while Zach had once been a teenage heartthrob with his lean build, longish brown hair and devilish smile, he’d turned into an absolutely mouthwatering man. He was still lean, especially in the hips, but broader in the shoulder and the chest. His dark eyes were no longer dreamy, they were piercing. His face had been youthful and soft then, but was rugged and strong now, with slashing cheekbones, a strong, resolute jaw and a sensually curved mouth.
In short, he was to die for.
Die. That reminded her. Hello? Dead guy in the living room.
She grabbed his arm, forcing herself to ignore the resulting spark of heated awareness. “Shall we walk around?”
He didn’t budge. Instead, Zach stared down at her, an inscrutable expression on his face. Finally he murmured, “No. I don’t think so. I want to see what’s going on inside.”
Chapter Four
Zach was going inside, whether Holly Cavanaugh liked it or not. She was trying to keep him from entering the inn and the first reason that came to mind was that an armed thug was inside holding someone hostage.