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When Leah ran off to Southern California, she hoped to leave freezing cold winters and unrequited love behind. She was never meant for a small town life and the timing with her longtime best friend–and secret soul mate–was always hopelessly off.
But after a mishap on the hit reality show Charming, Leah declares her love for Wade nationwide and is publicly dubbed "Lonely Leah." She returns to Marietta to hide at her family's home–from the media who wants to turn her into a human interest story, from the townspeople upset with her blunder, and most of all, from Wade, who wants to talk.
It took Leah leaving town to wake Wade Burns up to the reality that he's head over heels in love with his best friend. But now that she's back home, she's giving him the cold shoulder. With chocolate and a grand gesture, can Wade charm his way back into Leah’s heart?
The Love at the Chocolate Shop series
Book 1: Melt My Heart, Cowboy by CJ Carmichael
Book 2: A Thankful Heart by Melissa McClone
Book 3: Montana Secret Santa by Debra Salonen
Book 4: The Chocolate Cure by Roxanne Snopek
Book 5: The Valentine Quest by Melissa McClone
Book 6: Charmed by Chocolate by Steena Homes
More coming soon
Chapter
One
“I came home why again?” The
view outside her front window did nothing to convince Leah coming
back had been a good idea.
She’d
exchanged green grass, rolling hills, and soft sea breezes for
freezing snow, flat land, and chilling blizzard winds.
If
she had to do it all over again, coming back here should have been
the last option.
Who
was she kidding? This had been her only option.
She
ran home to lick her wounds and this…this cold, never-ending white
stuff outside was the price to pay.
One
freakish blizzard after the other. Almost as if Mother Nature herself
was trying to keep Leah in Marietta.
A
chilly burst of air from the crack at the bottom of the front door
wound its way around her ankles and nipped at her skin. Her four
pairs of wool socks were sitting in the washing machine along with
her only comfy pair of Mukluks. Thanks to Dylan’s cat, Jack, all
she had left were ankle socks. Who wore ankle socks during the winter
in Montana?
Dang
cat and his miserable temperament.
She’d
been home for exactly twenty-four hours, but she’d forgotten how
cold Marietta could get in the winter. She’d expected all her
winter gear would still be here, but her brother gave it all away
during a clothing drive last year.
Nice
one, Dylan.
When
she’d said she’d never return to Marietta, he’d apparently
believed her.
He
should know her better than that. She might say words she regretted
in the heat of the moment…but that was all they were…words.
As
if she could get Marietta out of her system.
She
didn’t mind coming back to visit…but she preferred coming back in
the summer—when it was sweltering hot.
Her
favorite time to come back was during the rodeo. Not in March.
Southern
California never got this cold. Ever.
Leah
shivered and drew the ends of her cardigan closer to her small-framed
body.
“Is
today the day I’m going to face the world?” Leah tossed the
question over to Jack, who laid on his bed in front of the floor
heater, ignoring her.
“That’s
what I thought. Licking my wounds a little while longer it is.”
Leah went to lightly rub the cat’s head, but his deep growl had her
pulling away. There were enough scratch marks on her hands to know he
was an ornery old thing.
“One
day, you’ll like me. I don’t care if it takes all the time in the
world, either.”
She
eyed the heavily blanketed sidewalk in front of the house and knew
she needed to go out and clean it off before anyone from the
retirement home down the street went for their daily walk. Dylan sent
a message earlier saying he’d take care of it when he got home, but
if she bundled up, no one would recognize her. Right?
Whether
it was the cold draft snaking around her ankles or just watching the
snow fall, goose bumps started to cover her body and Leah shivered.
She’d turned the kettle on earlier for tea. Hopefully, it was still
hot. She’d prefer hot chocolate, but after convincing Dylan to
bring home a carafe of Sage’s delectable concoction last night,
she’d never go back to the pre-packaged garbage her brother kept in
the cupboard.
Leah
reached for the tattered brown-and-blue knitted scarf Wade had made
for her one Christmas, wrapping its softness around her neck before
pouring boiling water into an awaiting mug of tea. The moment she
wrapped her hands around the hot mug, she sighed with relief,
enjoying the warmth as it seeped into her palms. Now, if only her
fingers would de-ice.
Of
all the places in this home she missed the most, it was this kitchen.
So many sweet memories of her life had started here. Baking with her
mother as a little girl, learning how to read recipes, create treats
from scratch…she cherished those moments. Her mom would tell her
stories about her past, of growing up and learning how to bake
herself. She shared stories about how her and Leah’s father met,
fell in love, and then stories about her and her brother, and then
all those memories where her mother gave her advice about her
friendships, her failed relationships, and then with…
No.
Leah clamped down on all thoughts about that…stuff.
It
made her miss her parents even more. They’d been gone for over
fifteen years now, having died in a tragic car accident where they
were forced off the road by a truck full of drunken teens.
Losing
her parents at the age of eighteen had changed her life in more ways
than one.
Leah
dedicated her life to working with teens, speaking at assemblies, and
even volunteered as a designated driver on the weekends…anything to
do her part in making sure they were aware of the dangers of drinking
and driving. Saving lives was her focus and goal.
She
hoped she hadn’t screw that up by her latest guffaw.
Leah
picked at one of the fresh-baked chocolate chip oatmeal muffins she’d
made earlier this morning. The plate of cinnamon buns she’d made in
the middle of the night after not being able to sleep called out to
her, but she’d save those as a reward for shoveling.
Food
made for great rewards.
“Sorry
about the blizzard, folks. Apparently, March is coming in like a lion
this year and not the lamb I’d predicted.” Dylan, her brother as
well as Marietta’s local radio DJ and weatherman’s voice, caught
her attention on the radio she had playing in the background. “Keep
those ice skates handy, though, as the weather should break by
midafternoon. And remember, I may not always get the weather right,
but I can make your mood better thanks to the sounds of our next
music artist, Garth Brooks.”
Leah
snickered at the apologetic tone to his voice. She could imagine the
phone calls her brother was getting at the station. There was a
running bet down at the local pub regarding Dylan and his weather
guarantees.
Leah
took a sip of her tea and enjoyed the scorching sensation as she
swallowed.
By
the time she was bundled up with her brother’s oversized hooded
jacket, waterproof mitts, knitted hat, and his extra-large snow
boots, she was sweating.
The
street outside was quiet. The falling snow muted the sounds of
traffic down the street. For a moment…a very brief moment…Leah
relished the stillness. Until cold puddles of liquid soaked through
the bottoms of the discarded boots she’d found in the front closet.
Now
she knew why they’d been buried at the back of the closet.
Leah
bit back a groan, pulled up the scarf around her neck to cover her
mouth and nose, reached for the shovel that rested just inside the
small alcove of the front porch, and started the arduous process of
clearing away the fluffy, yet dense snow.
She
hated winter. Hated it with a passion. Every year since moving away,
she’d send Dylan photos of her enjoying the warm sun whenever she
checked the weather and saw it’d snowed in Marietta. Every photo
she sent, Dylan would reply with a warning that karma had a nasty
temperament. Of course, Leah ignored that.
Karma
loved her. Karma would never turn on its heel and kick her in the
butt. Karma was her best friend.
Until
she did something to piss karma off.
Karma
sucked.
With
that in mind, Leah bent down and pushed her shovel along the
sidewalk. When it was full, she lifted it up, aiming the snow to go
flying over the curb and onto the road in front of her. Except a gust
of wind hit her and carried the snow behind her. A muffled gasp
caught her attention. Leah spun, her eyes widening in dismay as her
grandmother wiped snow off her face.
“Oh
my…Grams! I’m so sorry.” She dropped the shovel. “I didn’t
realize you were behind me, and the wind—” Leah rushed over and
brushed snow off her grandmother’s coat and scarf.
Grams
brushed her hands away, relinquished her hold of the man’s arm
beside her, and smoothed her bright red winter coat. “I always did
like a good snowball fight.” Her eyes twinkled while the color in
her cheeks matched her coat. “Wade, be a dear and finish clearing
Leah’s sidewalk?”
Leah
froze. Her mouth flapped like a gasping fish.
“Close
your mouth, Leah, it’s unbecoming.” Grams tapped her on the
sleeve.
Leah’s
hand tightened around the shovel but did as she was told, like a
little child.
Wade
Burns. Damn the man. Karma must really have it out for her right now.
“I’m
not ready for you. Not yet.” The words made their way out of her
mouth before she even knew she thought them.
The
way his eyes softened at her words made her want to scream.
Not
fair, Karma. Not fair.
Wade
Burns was her best friend. Her soul mate. The one person she trusted
more than anyone else in the world. Until last month, not a day went
by when they weren’t talking via text message, sharing a laugh on
Facebook, or even messaging on Twitter. This was the one man who knew
her inside and out, who loved her without prejudice. She treasured
his friendship more than anything in the world, which was why seeing
him here, now, when she wasn’t ready…
Not
fair, Karma. Not fair.
Exactly
five days ago, she’d blurted out her love for him on national
television.
It
had been the five longest days of her life.
The
five roughest days in the past few years.
Did
he know? Was she living in a dream world by hoping he didn’t?
Probably.
The
nail that’d been hammered deep into her heart after that
humiliating episode twisted, reopening the wound Wade himself had
placed there, and she was surprised she was still standing.
She’d
told him how she felt one night about a month ago, and he’d turned
her down. Not just turned her down, though; he completely obliterated
her by acting as if the words hadn’t popped out of her mouth at
all.
I
love you.
Gah.
She couldn’t even look at him now.
“Well,
kiddo,” Grams nudged her out of the way, “ready or not, here I
am.” Her grandmother headed to the front door and climbed the
steps. “Leah? Give the shovel to Wade.”
Leah
wordlessly handed the shovel over to the one man she’d hoped to
avoid for a little while longer.
His
soft, insanely gorgeous smile and wink confirmed he knew it, too.
“It’s
good to see you, Leah.” His voice, the audible version of smooth
butterscotch rum sliding down one’s throat, had her weak in the
knees. “I’ve been waiting for you to call or text…” He
watched her with those kind, gorgeous eyes of his, and her heart
started to tap-tap-tap against her chest. She rubbed at the spot, as
if it actually ached, before dropping her hand, hoping he hadn’t
caught that little response.
“Something
you need to get off your chest?” His low voice rumbled all the way
through her.
“What?
No…no…I just…” The words were all twisted up inside of her.
For
Pete’s sake, she was acting like a love-struck teenager, and there
was nothing she could do about it.
“Child,
get in the house.” Grams’ voice was full of laughter, leaving
Leah wishing that dying from embarrassment was actually a real thing.
“Grams,
you don’t play fair,” Leah hissed as she climbed the steps and
opened the door, moving to the side so her grandmother could walk in
first. She cast a quick glance down at Wade, who caught her looking
and gave her one of those heart-thumping smiles of his.
The
edges of her lips started to curl into something she hoped was a
smile, but feared might actually look like a grimace. The sudden
frown on his face confirmed that fear.
“I
never have, love,” Grams teased. Leah tore her gaze from Wade’s
and looked at her grandmother. “Why start playing fair now?” The
saucy grin on Grams’ face told Leah more than she needed to know.
She’d
brought Wade here on purpose. Damn the woman.
“Do
you have any salt or rock chips?” Wade asked before she could close
the door.
Leah
pointed to the round white container just off to the side of the
front porch. “There’s salt in there. Careful though. Dylan filled
it last night, so it’ll be…” Her jaw dropped for a few seconds
as she watched Wade lift it with one hand. “Heavy.” She shook her
head as Wade winked at her once again.
Damn
the man and his winks. And strong arms. And knowing smile. And…
She
was honest when she’d said she wasn’t ready for him yet. She
wasn’t. She needed another few days at least to work up the courage
to talk to him. Weeks even.
Heck,
make that months…and only after there were at least a thousand
miles or more separating them.
I can't wait to read this one. It's on my TBR
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