“I bumped into her mother in the store last week,” Elizabeth murmured. “She barely acknowledged me. I swear you’d think we’d known each other three minutes, not thirty years.”
“Cold as fish is Maura Daniels, and the husband’s almost as bad, although living with her, it’s not surprising. She’s frozen enough there are days a person could skate on her without risk of falling through the ice on the surface.” Walter slipped Maple some food under the table. “Don’t know how the pair of them produced someone as warm as Brenna.”
“Is that why she spent all her time over here when she was young?” Jess asked, and Tyler saw his mother exchange looks with his grandmother.
“She was an only child, and I expect she liked the company.” Closing down that line of conversation, Elizabeth started talking about plans for Christmas. “When will you be able to fetch me a tree, Jackson? I want one exactly like the one you found me last year.”
Tyler pushed his chair away from the table and stretched out his legs. “I’m taking a trip into the forest tomorrow to look at one of the trails. I’ll pick one up for you.”
“We need a tree, too.” Jess sat up straighter. “Can I come? Please? I want to help choose it.”
“You’ll be at school.”
“You could wait until I’m home.”
“Then it will be dark, and I’ll risk chopping off vital parts of my anatomy along with the tree.” He saw her expression change from excitement to disappointment. “We’ll go on Saturday, after skiing. We have a vaulted ceiling. We can have a bigger one than Grandma.”
His mother smiled, and Jackson picked up his beer.
“If you’re picking up a tree for Mom, can you choose one for Moose Lodge, too? It’s booked from this weekend for a week and then the Stephens family is having it after that.”
Tyler raised his eyebrows. “They’re back?”
“Well, of course they’re back.” His grandfather gave a grunt. “That’s what Snow Crystal is about. Families returning over and over again. Making memories. The Stephenses have been coming here summer and winter for the past five years. Or is it six?”
Jackson glanced up. “It’s six. And they’ve booked two weeks. Good to know what happened in the summer didn’t put them off.”
Kayla shuddered. “Can we not talk about it? I still get flashbacks.”
“You have flashbacks?” Cool and calm, Sean reached across the table for a knife. “You weren’t the one covered in the kid’s blood.”
Catching sight of his mother’s white face, Tyler decided it was time to change the subject. “You may have fixed the boy, but I fixed the bike. I deserve some of the hero worship.”
“Last time I talked to his dad, everything was fine.” Sean helped himself to more food. “No ill effects and the kid’s still riding that red bike of his, so I guess the whole incident scared us more than it scared him.”
Tyler doubted his brother had been scared. Even as a child, Sean hadn’t been bothered by the sight of blood or bone. On the contrary, it had fascinated him, a factor that had no doubt influenced his decision to become a surgeon.
“You called him?” Jackson reached for his beer. “That was nice of you.”
“All part of the service.”
Walter glanced at his grandson. “How is the new job working out? Are you missing Boston?”
“I’m not missing the traffic. And it’s good to be closer to here.”
“We love having you close by.” Elizabeth sneaked more potatoes onto Jess’s plate. “You need to keep your strength up. We have a lot of baking to do on Sunday, sweetheart. You’ll need to come over early. And if you want to spend the night on Saturday, that’s fine.”
“I’m skiing. It’s race training. Dad’s coming.” Jess’s whole face lit up like a Christmas tree, and Tyler put his fork down.
“Wouldn’t miss it.”
“Will Brenna be there, too?”
“Yeah, she should be.”
“That’s good. She’s a good teacher.”
Jackson lifted his beer. “Which is why I suggested she coach the high school team. But you had to interfere.”
“That’s right. I did.”
“Mind telling me why?”
“Because it’s Brenna’s idea of a nightmare. You shouldn’t have put her in that position.”
“What position?”
“Asking her to do something that’s hard for her when she already does so much for you.”
“Why is it hard?” Jackson looked blank. “She’s the obvious choice. She teaches that age all the time.”
His temper started to simmer. “But not the high school team. You’re asking her to go into the school. That place doesn’t have good memories for her.” He wondered how Jackson could possibly have forgotten, and then realized his brother had barely come up for air since the shocking discovery that Snow Crystal Resort was in serious trouble.
As if to confirm that, Jackson stared at him for a moment, eyes blank and unfocused as if he’d suddenly walked into the light after a decade underground. “That was a long time ago.” He thought for a moment and then cursed under his breath, earning himself a reproving look from his grandmother. “It was thoughtless of me. So why didn’t she refuse?”
“Because she hates confrontation, you know that. And she wants to please you. You’re her boss.”
“I’ve known her since kindergarten.”
“Doesn’t change the fact you’re her boss.”
“So how did you know?”
“I took a look at her face.”
Jackson raised an eyebrow. “Since when have you been Mr. Sensitive?”
“You don’t have to be sensitive to read Brenna.” Tyler finished his beer. “Everything she’s feeling is written right there on her face. All you have to do is look. Brenna is an open book. Always has been. She doesn’t have secrets.”
Kayla gave him a long look. “Every woman has secrets.”
“Not Brenna. I’ve known her all my life. There is nothing she thinks that I don’t know about.”
The conversation moved on, and by the time he and Jess finally left, the snow had increased in intensity.
Jess zipped up her jacket and pulled her hood over her hair. “You should invite Brenna over for dinner or something one night.”
“Why would I want to do that?” Tyler strode through the snow. “It’s enough trouble cooking for you without adding another person. And no woman in her right mind would want to set foot over the threshold of our house. If they didn’t break a limb in the hall, they’d drown or be attacked by dogs.”
“We could tidy up, and Brenna loves Ash and Luna. She’s always saying she’d love a dog, but she’s too busy working to have one.” She jogged alongside him to keep up with his long stride.
“Seems like the two of you have talked about more than school.”
“She’s cool.”
He scooped up snow and threw it at her, and she squealed and ducked. “Dad! Behave.”
“I’ve been cooped up with family night. I need to have a little fun.”
“You should start dating. It’s not natural for you to spend your evenings with me.”
Tyler thought of all the years he hadn’t had his daughter with him and looped his arm around her shoulder. “I like spending evenings with you when you’re not being a pain in the a—neck.”
“You were going to say ass.”
“I was not. And I don’t need to be fixed up by a—a—how old are you again?”
“Thirteen!”
“I don’t need to be fixed up by a thirteen-year-old.”
CHAPTER FOUR
THE ANTICIPATED SNOWSTORM hit during the early hours of the morning, bringing the worst weather locals had seen for years. Across the state there were power outages and havoc on the roads. Branches snapped and windshield wipers struggled to keep up with the intensity of the snowfall. The Highways Department plowed and sanded, and schools were closed.
Snow Crystal escaped all but the much longed for snowfall, which coated the mountains, the forest and the trails in a deep, thick layer of white.
The resort’s efficient snow-clearing operation had been underway for a few hours by the time Brenna left her lodge. The path that led through the forest to the Outdoor Center had already been cleared, and she trudged through the winter-white, her feet sinking into the snow, grateful for her warm clothing as she felt the sting of cold on her cheeks. She breathed in the smell of pine and paused for a moment, savoring the muffled silence that always followed a heavy fall of snow.
It wasn’t even seven o’clock but Élise was already in the gym, pounding on the treadmill while music shook the walls of the room that had been built as part of Jackson’s development of the spa. Glass walls overlooked the forest, and the trees loomed, ghostly white, out of the darkness.
Brenna winced at the throbbing beat and dropped her bag on the door. “Is this French? I don’t know what she’s singing about, but I’m really sorry it happened to her, and I think she needs therapy.”
Élise didn’t slow her pace. “She is angry because a man has treated her badly. Me, if a man did that to me I would—” She made a throat-slitting gesture, and Brenna shook her head as she peeled off her jacket.
“How does Sean sleep at night with you next to him? Does he hide all the sharp knives?”
“He is a surgeon. He is very skilled with a knife. If I chose to kill him, that would not be my way.”
“Good to know.” Brenna stepped onto the elliptical machine. “Did he make it to the hospital this morning? The roads must be in chaos with all this snow.”
“He stayed last night. He had a full operating list today and didn’t want to risk being snowed in. I slept alone.”
“Ah—” Brenna hit start “—so that explains your mood and the pounding music.”
“There is nothing wrong with my mood. My mood is as good as it ever is before the sun rises.” Élise ran as if she were being chased by a bear. “And you know I hate the gym. Me, I would always rather be running outdoors. I feel like a rodent on this treadmill. When I lived in Paris, always I ran outdoors.”
“I can’t imagine running in a city.” Brenna scooped her hair into a ponytail. “You’d be breathing in fumes and dodging traffic.”
“Who is breathing in fumes?” A sleepy-looking Kayla walked into the gym, her gaze fixed on her phone as she scrolled through her emails. Her blond hair was bunched untidily on top of her head, and her oversize sweater slid off her shoulder. “Who decided this was a good time to exercise? It’s barbaric.”
Brenna adjusted the controls. “It’s the same time we met every day in the summer to run around the lake.”
“But it was daylight. Now it’s dark, and I hate the dark. Any chance we could start this an hour later?”
Élise glanced across at her. “What time did you start work when you were working for that fancy company in New York?”
“5:00 a.m., but I was in my own apartment at the time. Back then I worked with reasonable people. No one expected me to show up at a gym and exhaust myself physically before my day started.”
Élise lifted her eyebrows. “As if you haven’t been exhausting yourself physically all night with Jackson.”
Kayla gave a smug smile. “That’s different.”
“Isn’t that his sweater?”
“It might be.” Her phone rang, and she checked the number. “It’s Lissa in Reception. Excuse me, fellow morning masochists, I need to take this. Hi, Liss, how’s it going?” Still listening, she dropped her bag on the floor. “Wow—that’s great news. Yes, I know it’s a lot—don’t worry, I’ll handle it. Leave it to me.” She hung up, and Brenna increased her pace.
“What’s great news? What are you handling now?”
“A run of bookings!” Kayla did a pirouette. “We’ve had another twenty since last night. The snow is bringing them in like wasps to a honeypot.” She typed an email quickly. “This storm is exactly what we needed. I’m starting to think there’s a possibility we could even be full.”
Élise wiped her brow with her forearm. “And this news is enough to make you dance? I will never understand you.”
“That’s fine, because I don’t understand you, either. Or je ne comprends pas vous, as you would say.”
Élise winced. “That is not what I would say. Your French is truly terrible. I beg you, please speak only English.”
“I have to tell Jackson. God, I love my job.” Grinning, Kayla dialed, tapped her foot impatiently and then pulled a face. “His phone is switching to voice mail. Where is he?”
“Probably looking for his sweater.”
Brenna intervened. “Knowing Jackson, he’s already somewhere in the resort sorting out a problem.” She thought about the year before, when they’d all been worried that the business might go under. Jackson had been gray and exhausted with the pressure of keeping the family business going and handling sensitive family issues. “What you’ve done is an incredible achievement, Kayla. Great job.”
“Team effort. I get them here, Élise gives them food they’ll never forget and you show them the best time on the slopes so they want to come back. We should do a staff gathering, open champagne or something. Make a fuss. Get some excitement going. It would be motivational for everyone after all the uncertainty. I’ll suggest it to Jackson.” Kayla pressed Send on her email. “I need to talk to him because if we’re full, that puts pressure on the whole resort. Not only accommodation, but ski rental, classes, snowmobile hire—all the usual stuff.”
“If you’re accommodating extra people then they need to eat!” Scowling, Élise increased the speed on the treadmill. “Which means thanks to you, I am going to be working twice as hard this Christmas. I don’t know why I even bother with this treadmill when I spend so much time running around the kitchen.”
“You love being busy.” Kayla stepped onto the machine next to her, her phone still in her other hand.
Brenna exchanged a glance with Élise, who simply raised her eyes to the ceiling and gave a Gallic shrug.
“She was born with the phone attached to her hand. Sometimes I think for Kayla, her phone is more important than her heart. It keeps the blood flowing. If she puts it down, part of her dies.”
“Put the phone away, Kayla,” Brenna said mildly, “or you’ll have a horrible accident.”
“And then blood would truly be flowing.” Élise slowed her pace and reached for her water. “And my Sean, he is very busy today already, so he will not have time to put your bones back together if they are crunched by a treadmill.”
Kayla shuddered. “That is disgusting.”
“It is his job.”
“I know what his job is. I don’t need details.”
“Sometimes I think our jobs have many similarities.” Élise put the water bottle down. “We both spend our day dealing with bones and raw meat.”
“Oh, please.” Kayla turned green, and Brenna smiled.
“She’s doing it on purpose to wind you up. She’s laughing at you.”
“She won’t be laughing when I lose my breakfast over her feet. I am so glad I don’t live in your house, Élise. I wouldn’t want to be present for your end of workday conversations.”
“You think we waste our time together talking about work? We are both passionate about what we do, but when we finish, that is it. Sometimes we don’t talk at all. We just have sex.”
“Too much information.” Kayla grabbed the remote and turned up the music then realized it was French and turned it down with a disgusted sound.
Élise turned it up again. “You are so uptight. What is wrong with sex?”
“I never said there was anything wrong with it. I just don’t understand your need to talk about it all the time.”
“Why not? Sex is a perfectly normal, healthy thing. And the O’Neil men are all very physical, sexual men. The moment Sean walks through that door, he stops thinking about his day.” Élise gave a naughty smile. “Last night we—”
“No!” Kayla covered her ears with her hands. “Brenna, stop her! She listens to you.”
Brenna glanced at Élise, envying the ease with which she talked about sex, and envying her relationship with Sean. How would it feel to come home to someone you loved at night instead of an empty house? How must it feel to know that the person you loved, loved you back? You wouldn’t have to hide it, or hold it in. You wouldn’t have to dig your nails into your palms to stop you from reaching out and touching.
Kayla was clearly still in work mode. “Élise, I know you were thinking of closing the Boathouse for Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, but if we’re full, I think you might need to keep it open.”
Élise was running fast again, her dark hair brushing her jaw. “Are you telling me how to manage my restaurants?”
“I’m telling you our guest numbers have doubled.” Strolling on the treadmill, Kayla was still checking emails on her phone. “They’re going to need to be fed. I see an opportunity.”
“I see a nervous breakdown.” Out of breath, Élise stabbed a button on the machine and slowed down. “I will need to hire extra staff for the Christmas week.”
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