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“What’s supposed to be the magic of a Christmas moon?”
“Two things. First, you can make a wish and it will come true. Secondly, and the best, it’s said that if a couple kisses under a Christmas moon, they’ll be together forever.” Liberty smiled. “Kind of sweet, don’t you think?”
Jake shrugged that off. “Sweet is in the eye of the beholder,” he murmured.
“Come on. You can’t be that jaded about Christmas and romance, can you?”
He was silent, then said, “I’ve never been a romantic.”
“Of course, men hate to admit being romantic.”
He exhaled. “Believe it.”
“You don’t date or anything?”
“I do. But I’ve got my career, and with it being a questionable one, I don’t drag anyone into it.”
“I guess if you think you’re dragging someone into your life, it wouldn’t be very romantic, would it?”
Jake studied Liberty. “You have enough romance in you to make up for the lack in me.”
Dear Reader,
To most of us, family is everything. It’s our center in a sometimes chaotic world, having loved ones who care about us no matter what happens. It’s that safe place when nothing makes sense. It’s all ours, and we love it beyond measure. But the definition of family is what we make it.
In my new series, Eclipse Ridge Ranch, family is a group of three men who as teenagers were sent to a ranch in northern Wyoming when it was a group home for foster kids, run by Maggie and Sarge Caine. For Jake Bishop, Seth Reagan and Ben Arias, they found hope and acceptance, and it was the only time in their lives when they knew the meaning of family.
Under a Christmas Moon is the story of Jake Bishop and Liberty Connor—two people on seemingly different trajectories in their well-planned lives. They find that love can come without warning…especially if a couple kisses under a Christmas moon. The legend has it that, if that happens, the couple will be together for forever.
I hope you enjoy Jake and Liberty’s story, and remember that love comes in the most unexpected ways and at the most unexpected times.
Happy holidays!
Mary Anne Wilson
Under a Christmas Moon
Mary Anne Wilson
Mary Anne Wilson is a Canadian transplanted to California, where her life changed dramatically. She found her happily-ever-after with her husband, Tom, and their three children. She always loved writing, reading and has a passion for anything Jane Austen. She’s had around fifty novels published, been nominated for a RITA® Award, won Reviewers’ Choice Awards and received RWA’s Career Achievement Award in Romantic Suspense.
Books by Mary Anne Wilson
Harlequin Heartwarming
Unspoken Words
For the Love of Hayley
Undercover Father
A Question of Honor
Flying Home
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.
Tom,
With every beat of my heart, I still think of you.
I will love you forever.
CONTENTS
Prologue
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
Epilogue
PROLOGUE
Arizona, September
IT LOOKED LIKE a road to nowhere, but Jake Bishop knew better. After a mile of driving on the cracked asphalt that turned off the highway north into the desert, it ended at a set of massive metal gates. The ten-foot-tall barrier bore no logos or company names. There was no explanation for it or the imposing security fencing that ran into the distance both east and west with a spiraling razor wire topping it.
Jake had been here three months ago on a job and knew exactly what was behind all that security. He brought his dusty black pickup to a stop and lowered his window to gain access to a call box on a heavy support post. As furnace-like air hit him, he grimaced. In the second week of September, the Arizona sun was relentless. His black T-shirt and jeans, which he wore with tooled leather boots, felt too heavy and too confining. Even wearing sunglasses, he had to squint to see the call button before he pressed it.
A surveillance camera swiveled around to aim at him. “Hey, right on time.” He recognized the voice of Simon Fox, the head of security for Madison Development, when it came over the speaker.
“The man said 1200 hours. I’m here.”
“Well, come on up.”
The call ended as the gates swung slowly back to give Jake access to the sprawling compound. He drove through and up a well-paved access road for about half a mile toward the central core of the business buildings, a group of low-roofed stone-and-wood structures. He drove past them, then turned onto a gravel road that ran parallel to a runway large enough to accommodate most commercial-sized jets.
He drove up to a single Quonset hut a good distance from the main buildings. Painted a chalky white, it was only recognizable as Security because two Jeeps parked right by it had M.D. SECURITY lettered in red on their doors. Jake stopped and pressed his truck’s horn.
His cell rang and he answered it immediately. “I’m waiting out here.”
“Sorry,” Simon Fox said in his ear. “Change of plans. Madison isn’t wheels-down until 1400 hours.” Victor Madison, who oversaw everything from the first ideas to the final product of his cutting-edge private jet development company, had been precise when Jake had talked to him two days ago. Two days, 1200 hours. I’ll be waiting for you, the man had said. Now Jake was the one waiting.
Simon gave Jake the code for the access door to the hut, then added, “Go on in and cool off.” The call ended.
Jake stared at the security building. Two hours. He hated delays and wasting time, especially when he was more than up for an emergency retest on the MT-007 prototype, which was why he was here. He wanted to find out what he must have missed on the first flight test, as much as he wanted to check out the plane.
When he got out of the truck into the smothering heat, the desert wind caught at his hair, which was in real need of a trim. He raked it back with his fingers, then grabbed his cell and swung the door shut. He didn’t even think about going into the Quonset hut. Instead, he walked the football-field length to the runway, then stepped up onto the tarmac and headed east.
By the time he reached the closest of the two massive hangars, his clothes were sticking to his skin, and his hair was clinging damply to his neck. He walked over to the bank of independently operating, thirty-foot-high doors that made up the front of the oxidized green building. Grabbing a thick leather strap on the closest door and avoiding contact with the hot metal, he pulled the door open. There was a groan of metal on metal, then he had a wide enough gap to get out of the heat and sun.
The outward appearance of the buildings in the compound were deceiving. They looked old, dusty, sunbaked and totally unremarkable. But inside, the setups were cutting-edge in every way. That included total climate control, and the cool air felt great as Jake took off his aviator sunglasses to hook them on his T-shirt.
As his
eyes adjusted, he saw his target right in the middle of the vast space: the prototype MT-007. She was incredible, her lines elegant yet fierce. The slightly downward wing thrust and high angle of the tail by the double engines enhanced that feeling of movement even when she was sitting still. There was none of the showy paint or logos and chrome that would eventually be added, but even the dull black finish didn’t diminish her.
“Flawed, but beautiful,” he breathed as he strode across the concrete toward the eight-passenger jet. He made it to within ten feet of it before he heard the shout he’d expected but thought would take longer to come.
“Stop right there!” He turned toward Simon Fox, who was little more than a dark silhouette against the brilliance of the sun behind him in the doorway.
“Your timing sucks, Simon,” Jake called.
“I’ve got perfect timing,” the man said as he took a couple of steps into the hangar and motioned Jake over to him.
The security man was about as tall as Jake but not as lean, and maybe five years older than Jake. With dark buzzed hair, he looked annoyingly cool in jeans, a white shirt and lugged boots. The only sign he was on duty was his black shoulder holster.
Jake slowly jogged back to within three feet of Simon. “I just wanted to have a look at her.”
Simon shook his head. “When I got the alarm, I knew you were faster than I thought you’d be in this heat.”
Jake ignored that and asked, “What came up with her?”
“Don’t know, but if I did and told you, I’d have to eliminate you and then myself.”
He shrugged. “I’m just curious about what was so important that a new test had to be run so expeditiously.”
Simon exhaled. “It’s not in my job description to know anything about that.” He shook his head before his deep brown eyes met Jake’s. “You need to chill, literally and figuratively.”
“No, I need to figure out what I missed the first time.”
“The boss was right about you. No nerves, no hesitation. He knows you press it to the limit as if you have nothing to lose or as if you have some special lucky charm.”
Jake reached into the watch pocket of his jeans and took out something he’d carried with him for fifteen years. He caught it between his thumb and forefinger and held it up to show Simon.
The man squinted at a gold medal about the size of a silver dollar. It wasn’t quite a true circle and had mellowed in color. It had once been engraved, but that was long gone due to the fingers that had worried it over the years.
“So, that’s your lucky charm?” Simon asked.
Jake closed his hand around it as he drew it back. “I got this from my foster dad, a retired marine. We all called him Sarge. When I was heading to boot camp, he gave this to me. It’s a Distinguished Service Medal he was awarded in Vietnam. He told me it was to help me remember I make my own destiny, and to own it.” Sarge—whose real name was Jim Caine—and his wife, Maggie, had opened up their ranch in Eclipse, Wyoming, to run a foster care group home. Jake had moved there at fifteen. He didn’t know if he’d told anyone this before, but Sarge had been on his mind a lot lately.
“You figure this is your destiny?” Simon asked as he motioned to the plane behind him.
Jake pushed the medal back into his pocket. “Until I drive back out the gates and head to Florida for my next contract.”
When Jake had been released from the foster system at eighteen, he’d left the ranch and shaped his own destiny as much as he could. But he always kept in touch with Sarge as well as with Seth Reagan and Ben Arias, his best friends on the ranch. They were all living their own lives now, the way Jake was living his.
“Sarge sounds like a good guy,” Simon said.
“Yes, he was and is.” In a flash of memory the man came to him—six foot five with imposingly broad shoulders, big hands and a big voice. You are part of this place now if you want to be, Sarge had boomed at Jake, a teenager whom everyone else had written off as a lost cause. “He told me if I did right, he’d do right by me,” Jake said. “He meant it.”
If Jake had downtime between this retest and his next contract, he would go up to the ranch and see if Ben and Seth could meet him there. He’d been away far too long this time.
“Smart, too. Now let’s get you out of here,” Simon said, and stepped back out into glaring sun and heat.
Jake started to follow. He was about to step over the threshold when he heard a double-clicking sound echo behind him. In a single heartbeat, there was a massive roar accompanied by a rush of fiery air.
Jake instantly knew it was an explosion, and it hit hard and fast with a force that lifted him off his feet. He was hurled up and out into the brilliant light of day. For one surreal moment, he was flying. The next moment, pain beyond endurance came along with a crushing pressure that targeted his chest and head. No air. No way to breathe or stop his momentum as the sky and tarmac reversed places, and in that single moment, Jake knew he’d run out of time.
He’d never see Seth, Ben or Sarge again. This was the destiny he’d designed by his own actions.
CHAPTER ONE
“TWENTY-ONE DAYS until Christmas, and I’m stuck,” Libby Connor called out to her assistant in the reception area just outside her open office door.
“Twenty-one days? Are you sure?” Wendy Davis called back.
Libby pushed her chair away from the desk and the oversize monitor that showed the architectural repurposing she’d been working on. She stretched her arms to ease the tightness in her neck and shoulders. She’d been in the Brant Chase Architecture and Design offices in Seattle since early morning. It was a Friday, nearing six o’clock. Libby hadn’t had any meetings today, so she’d dressed down in jeans, sneakers and a T-shirt from her college days.
At five foot two, she was often called petite but persistent. When she wanted to do something, she was determined. Right now, she was very determined to figure out how to give a stubborn client what they wanted so she could get home before dark. Wendy, a slender woman who had just turned fifty, came to the door to peek in. “I’m heading out. Anything else you need?”
“Not unless you have a great idea how I can give Swanson a full luxury exercise area for the tenants in the new lofts without him agreeing to give up any existing space for it.”
“You’re the adaptive reuse expert for redoing buildings in the city, and you’re a brilliant architect and designer, so wave your magic wand and give him his space.”
Libby laughed at that. “I forgot about that wand.”
“When does Roger get back?” Wendy said.
“Monday.”
“How long’s he been gone this time?”
Wendy had been with Libby through all her fiancé’s comings and goings for work as head of his family’s charity foundation, The Montgomery-Thomas Water Initiative Group. “Three months in west Africa, near Mali. But he’ll be here for our first Christmas and New Year’s together. Then we have a ton to do for the wedding.”
She just had to finish with her final client of the year. Roger would be here in two days, and then her focus was all about spending the holidays with him and planning their big day. Libby had waited her whole life for this, and she wanted it to be all theirs. Now she was finding it difficult fighting off his mother’s daily suggestions for the wedding without him here. Offending his family was the last thing she ever wanted to do.
“You’re lucky. He’s got money and looks, and runs all over the world helping people get, what is it, clean water?”
“Yes, and now he’s doing most of the on-site work.”
Wendy waved to Libby. “Well, I’m gone.”
“Have a good weekend.”
Libby turned to the large monitor and saw an incoming call. She smiled at the caller username GeekPro and accepted the call. A moment later Seth Reagan, a good friend of hers, came on the screen.
She could tell he was at his corporate headquarters in the city, no more than five minutes away by car, maybe ten by bike. She greeted him with, “You had to call instead of coming to visit in person, didn’t you?”
“Hey, you’re at work and there’s Friday afternoon traffic out there.”
“I’d like to see you in person once in a while. You’re the only tech geek who can make me understand why my computer hates me so much.”
“Oh, am I interrupting something between you and your computer?”
“Yes, you are,” she said, and smiled. “Thank you so much.”
Seth laughed, looking like some college grad in a T-shirt with his company logo on it, his thick brown hair mussed from raking his fingers through it. No one would mistake him for being the founder and CEO of a very successful tech company dedicated to developing cybersecurity. He also didn’t look incredibly wealthy, but he was. “What’s going on?” he asked.
“I have this client who’s driving me nuts.”
“You’ve got enough pressure getting married to the golden boy of the Montgomery family without client problems.”
“Hey, I’m okay with whatever I have to do to make it easier for Roger. But his parents just keep pushing their ideas for the wedding. They’re giving me suggestions that are incredibly formal and not what I want.” She sighed heavily. “But it’s what they want. Three months to go and they want it held in some new place that extends out over the Sound. Can you believe that?” She wasn’t going to fall into a self-pity role, no matter what happened. She knew she was marrying into the Montgomery family, one of the most powerful families in the city and state. She’d fit in with them and make Roger happy. She just had to figure out how to fit in and still get the wedding she wanted without offending anyone.
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