Christmas Promises at the Garland Street Markets: A feel good Christmas romance (New York Ever After, Book 5)

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Christmas Promises at the Garland Street Markets: A feel good Christmas romance (New York Ever After, Book 5) Page 1

by Helen J Rolfe




  Christmas Promises at the Garland Street Markets

  (Book 5 in the New York Ever After series)

  Helen J Rolfe

  Books by Helen J Rolfe:

  The Friendship Tree

  Handle Me with Care

  In a Manhattan Minute

  The Summer of New Beginnings

  You, Me, and Everything In Between

  Christmas at Snowdrop Cottage

  Magnolia Creek series books:

  What Rosie Found Next (book 1)

  The Chocolatier’s Secret (book 2)

  The Magnolia Girls (book 3)

  New York Ever After series books:

  Christmas at the Little Knitting Box (book 1)

  Snowflakes and Mistletoe at the Inglenook Inn (book 2)

  Wedding Bells on Madison Avenue (book 3)

  Christmas Miracles at the Little Log Cabin (book 4)

  Christmas Promises at the Garland Street Markets (book 5)

  Orion Publishing - Books written as Helen Rolfe:

  Valentine’s Day at the Café at the End of the Pier (Pier series, free short story)

  Spring at the Café at the End of the Pier (Pier series, part 1)

  Summer at the Café at the End of the Pier (Pier series, part 2)

  Autumn at the Café at the End of the Pier (Pier series, part 3)

  Christmas at the Café at the End of the Pier (Pier series, part 4)

  The Little Café at the End of the Pier (Pier series, entire collection)

  Summer Nights in Lantern Square (Lantern Square series, part 1)

  Falling Leaves in Lantern Square (Lantern Square series, part 2)

  Christmas in Lantern Square (Lantern Square series, part 3)

  Snowfall in Lantern Square (Lantern Square series, part 4)

  The Little Village Library – coming January 2020

  This book has been edited in British English (BrE) and therefore uses British spellings.

  Copyright © 2019 Helen J Rolfe

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner without the express written permission of the author.

  Helen J Rolfe asserts the right to be identified as the author of this book. All the characters and events in this book are fictional. Any resemblance to individuals is entirely coincidental.

  About the author

  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

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  About the author

  Before she started writing books, Helen J. Rolfe worked in I.T. until she came to her senses and studied journalism and writing. She wrote articles for Women’s Health & Fitness magazines as well as newsletter content and media releases for a not-for-profit organisation. In 2011 the fiction bug bit and Helen has been writing fiction ever since.

  Helen J. Rolfe writes uplifting, contemporary fiction with characters to relate to and fall in love with. Christmas Promises at the Garland Street Markets is her fifteenth novel.

  Find out more: www.helenjrolfe.com

  Facebook: www.facebook.com/helenjrolfewriter

  Twitter: https://twitter.com/HJRolfe

  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/helen_j_rolfe/

  Chapter One

  Cleo

  Cleo was back in New York City, in the depths of Manhattan where it had all begun after she moved here from England all those years ago.

  At the end of Garland Street, not far from Greenwich Village, she stood in front of a row of run-down stores, breathing in the crisp wintry air, the smog, the atmosphere bathed in the sounds of the city and lights that dazzled even at this early hour of the morning. She looked along the broad sidewalk and took in the thirty Swiss-style wooden chalets all at various stages of getting ready for business on the first official day of trading.

  The Garland Street winter markets were new to Manhattan and Cleo hadn’t hesitated to sign up for a stall when she heard about them. She thrived on doing anything to take her business to the next level, whether it was sourcing new and amazing yarns for her store, The Little Knitting Box, running workshops or reaching a new clientele like she could do here for the next few weeks. Dylan had been hesitant about her taking on this particular project; he thought time might be better spent planning their wedding, which they still hadn’t managed to set a date for. Sometimes Cleo didn’t really see why they had to change anything. They made a good team with four kids between them – Ruby and Jacob from Dylan’s first marriage, their daughter Tabitha who was almost three and baby Emily who’d just turned sixteen months – did they really need a piece of paper to prove their commitment? And just because Grandpa Joe kept telling her he wasn’t getting any younger and her dad was desperate to walk her down the aisle, it didn’t stop Cleo worrying about ten-year-old Ruby. She was misbehaving and pitching Cleo against Dylan whenever someone mentioned the word wedding and Cleo wondered why the little girl had suddenly gone from being a friend to acting like the enemy.

  ‘You’d better get organised.’ Mitch leaned another Christmas tree against the chalet he’d reserved after hearing Cleo’s plans for this market and wanting in. They’d come into the city together today. ‘I’ll send Jude down with more of your boxes.’

  She snapped into the present and out of her New York daydream – the feeling of being back here, taking it all in for a moment before she got busy. ‘I was soaking up the city atmosphere, but you’re right, I need to be ready for those customers.’ She hoped despite the markets being new, the footfall wouldn’t be much different to other venues, although maybe on the first day it might be quite nice if it started off slow.

  While Cleo and Dylan had been sitting in Marlo’s, the neighbourhood café in Inglenook Falls, a few months ago they’d been debating the merits of branching out to a city market as well as the local winter markets and Mitch had overheard them. He’d recently opened up his Christmas tree farm to the public and with a lot of encouragement from his girlfriend Holly, who was sitting with him in the café at the time, Mitch ended up agreeing with the idea and signing up at the same time as Cleo for the Garland Street winter markets. He’d paid for a prime spot at the end of the row on Garland Street, the only one big enough to take all the trees, and already each stallholder had been told by the organisers that next year wouldn’t be so easy, they’d have to sign up at the end of this season if they wanted a hope of getting a chalet again.

  Mitch carried on hauling trees from his truck parked on the corner, the scent of pine filling the air and bringing Christmas to Garland Street before anyone else got a chance. Cleo, armed with a big box of woollen products and the key to unlock her very own chalet, made her way past stallholders clutching their cups of coffee, others buzzing with the excitement of it all. One couple was already hanging jewellery on hooks on the folded back doors of their chalet and the atmosphere had a similar feel to that of Christmas morning, everyone waiting for the off.

  The kids would be
at home with Dylan now, in that crazy rush that happened before school, and Cleo was glad to be out of it for the time being. She reached number twenty-two, balanced the box between her knee and the door, undid the padlock and crept inside the generous wooden cube. The smell of freshly cut timber that came with these sorts of chalets hung around and she couldn’t wait to get her display ready and fill the place with garments she’d made from the yarns at her store. She wouldn’t be allowed to trade for another hour so she moved the tables around inside, pushed them all together to create a big central table instead. A smaller table sat in the corner with a couple of fold-up chairs and she had knitting with her in case the day had slow pockets, something she couldn’t really predict. She put a money belt on around her waist beneath her coat and tipped in a bit of change she’d brought from home as well as the whizzy credit card machine. She’d decided against a till – far too vulnerable for light fingers.

  She folded back both doors and hooked them in place. It was freezing today but she’d layered up with a thermal long-sleeved top, a chunky woollen sweater, her coat, scarf, and gloves that would only come off for the fiddliest of jobs.

  ‘Where do you want these?’ Jude, recognised only by voice given Cleo couldn’t see him behind the two big boxes in his arms, was Mitch’s helper for the day. And hers, right now.

  Cleo took the box that enabled her to see the boy, a good friend of Mitch’s and almost like a second son to him. ‘You’re a star, thank you. Let me lock up and I’ll come back for the rest.’

  ‘Albie’s mom just dropped him off so Mitch has enough hands to line up the trees; I don’t mind getting the boxes for you.’

  ‘You’re a good lad.’ As was Albie, Mitch’s son.

  Jude blushed slightly as boys of his age did when they were given compliments and returned down the street, back to the Christmas tree stall and the truck. Cleo appreciated the help since she was on her own for now. Her assistant Kaisha would be manning the stall at the Inglenook Falls markets today, Dylan had the kids and the school run to contend with, and her friend Amelia who she’d roped in to help as a last-minute favour, enticed with free accommodation courtesy of friends Darcy and Myles, wouldn’t be arriving from England until today. This was how most things worked in Cleo’s life these days. Like a military operation with all bases covered, but she and Dylan were well practised. And they had good solid friendships without which Cleo wasn’t sure she’d be as calm as she was. She still saw her good friend Violet who’d thrown the party where she met Dylan, but nowadays she was closer to Darcy and Myles, Holly and Mitch since their lives had become so intertwined.

  When Cleo had talked with her friend Amelia on the phone yesterday to wish her a safe trip, she’d tried to explain to Amelia how she knew all these people. She’d told Amelia how Darcy had once come to Cleo’s knitting workshops when she still had the store in the West Village and they’d struck up a friendship from there. Darcy went on to run the Inglenook Inn in Greenwich Village where Myles had been a guest and they’d got together despite a rocky history. Holly was the journalist who covered a Christmas story at the inn and she and Darcy had hit it off. Holly had had a career crisis – her words, nobody else’s – and gone freelance rather than facing gruelling office hours in the city and when she’d gone to Inglenook Falls to cover a grand hotel opening, she’d literally fallen into Mitch’s life.

  Everyone seemed to lead complicated lives, they all had their share of ups and downs, and Cleo’s friend Amelia was no exception. Amelia had something complicated going on at work, a nephew, Kyle, who she was incredibly close to but who kept getting into trouble, and a boyfriend everyone had assumed she would marry but who’d dumped her without warning six months ago. Amelia also had a sister, Connie, who in Cleo’s opinion had always relied a little too heavily on Amelia and Cleo wouldn’t mind betting that was adding to the troubles given Kyle was Connie’s son. When Cleo had suggested Amelia take a holiday and asked whether she’d be interested in helping her out at the markets on a very casual basis Amelia had leapt at the chance, and asked if she could bring Kyle too.

  Cleo had related much of Amelia’s situation to her own friends on Halloween as she stitched up a bloodthirsty vampire costume for Jacob and wrestled an almost-sixteen-month-old Emily into a pumpkin outfit. And her friends, being the sort of great people they really were, had come up with a plan. Mitch needed some brawn on the Christmas tree stall to help net the trees and serve customers, so that would keep Kyle occupied and perhaps give Amelia a break from the worrying she shouldn’t have to do when she wasn’t the mother. Myles and Darcy owned a rental property they wanted to spruce up and sell and so they’d leapt in to suggest Amelia and Kyle could stay there rent-free in exchange for keeping an eye on the place for them given their own hectic work schedules.

  Inside the wooden chalet now, protected somewhat from the winter chill, Cleo took out a bottle of surface spray and a cloth and gave the tables a once-over. They were pretty clean already but she wanted to be doubly sure no dust had crept its way through the wood since she’d last been here to bring the tables and chairs. When boxes appeared at the chalet door again she took them from Jude’s arms before he went back for the rest and she began to organise the table. She arranged pebble-coloured V-neck sweaters in a variety of sizes, the deep-teal round-neck sweaters next to those and then the dark charcoal. Next it was on to a box of ladies’ knitwear – cardigans and sweaters in a multitude of colours and knitting styles. Cleo had been working flat out to get ready for the Garland Street winter markets. She was focusing here on finished products rather than the haberdashery or the yarns themselves, so next it was on to unpacking the box of scarves, hats and socks that she’d been knitting over the last few weeks. She had plum-shaded hats with pom-poms on top, winter-leaf-patterned and cable-knit hats, gloves large and small, for men and for women, multi-patterned beanies and the table in the centre of the hut was fast becoming a riot of colour.

  ‘Last two.’ This time it was Mitch who’d come to the hut with the remaining boxes.

  When he placed them down she asked, ‘Are you all set up and ready?’

  ‘As ready as I’m ever going to be.’

  ‘Can you believe we’re doing this? I’m excited to be in the city.’

  ‘Not sure it’s me, but it’s different.’ His gruff appearance hid a softer side to his personality that had been coaxed out when he met Holly, was reunited with his son, Albie, and got his life back on track. Now, nobody would really understand the pain he’d been through. He had integrated back into the local community of Inglenook Falls and was a pleasure to be around these days.

  ‘It’s only four weeks, then you never have to come back to the city if you hate it,’ she told him.

  His stubble was all the more visible now the sun had crept up into the sky, hovering somewhere behind the tall buildings that dwarfed the market stalls. ‘Who knows, I might enjoy it. That’s what Holly keeps telling me.’

  Holly was good for him. She was confident, she didn’t hold back when she wanted to say something, and Cleo couldn’t imagine either of them without the other. ‘Is she coming today?’

  ‘She’s already taking photos.’

  ‘Typical,’ Cleo grinned. Holly had a love of photography that doubled as work and no doubt she’d soon be capturing shots of the market traders getting ready, faces anticipating what was to come, the joy of Christmas right around the corner. You never know, she may have even photographed some of them already and Cleo almost wished she’d done more than wound her dark blonde hair up into a top knot. Mind you, it was so cold it wouldn’t be long before she tugged the band out and put a woolly hat on her head instead. Already, whenever the wind found its way inside the chalet it licked around her ears promising more.

  Mitch went back to his own stall, leaving Cleo to finish setting up. And before long, the bell to mark the start of trading was accompanied by a whoop from the traders that Cleo joined in with and it was all systems go. People had been milling and
perusing stalls, some ready to pounce on purchases, others happy to take it all in. And Cleo already suspected there wouldn’t be much chance to take out her knitting and sit on the fold-up chair at the back of the chalet while she waited for business to get going.

  Cleo put another purchase into a paper bag for her customer. ‘Be sure to hand-wash or put it in the machine on the wool cycle,’ she advised after she took the credit card payment for a deep-teal sweater she’d knitted herself. She and Mitch had compared notes on the drive this morning. Cleo didn’t sell a huge number of ready-made products at the Little Knitting Box, it was mostly yarns and haberdashery, so all year round with holiday markets in mind she was continuously building up as much stock as possible. Mitch was hard at it three hundred and sixty-five days of the year too, cultivating trees in their infancy, others in maturity. Neither of them did much outsourcing, preferring to throw their own energies into businesses that were their passion as much as their livelihood.

  ‘You’ll have to get the kids knitting, make a production line.’ It was Dylan, ducking to avoid the top of the chalet doorway as he stepped inside.

  ‘What are you doing here?’ A smile spread across Cleo’s face at the sight of the handsome man with green eyes and dark blond dishevelled hair who’d won her over in a second three years ago when he’d walked her home from her friend’s party and kissed her against a tree. He was still as devastatingly attractive now as he was then, as amazing as he’d been the day he proposed in front of all their family and friends at the Little Knitting Box last December. Some days his daughter Ruby seemed all for the idea of making Cleo an official fixture in her life, other days she scowled across the room or was deliberately obstinate. Dylan assumed the delay to their wedding plans was all down to their hectic lives with Cleo’s knitting business and his web design company, but it wasn’t strictly true. Cleo never wanted to get married unless everyone was one hundred per cent for it, but she didn’t want to cause waves and tell Dylan that Ruby might not be as on board as he thought. Dylan and Ruby were close. She never wanted him to have to choose to please one over the other.

 

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