Read Cole's Christmas Wish Online

Authors: Tracy Madison

Cole's Christmas Wish (2 page)

He supposed he could also hope that Rachel would bolt, as she
had with him and other relationships over the years, but wishing for that felt
wrong. Cole wanted her to be happy, and that wouldn’t happen until she’d figured
out that running away never solved a damn thing.

The couple stopped outside the window. Andrew pulled Rachel
close for a kiss that reignited Cole’s mental images of how they might have
spent their afternoon. Cole swallowed, squeezed his hand tight around his coffee
cup and waited the interminable seconds until they separated. Rachel said
something, laughed again and tugged Andrew toward the door.

It took every bit of willpower that Cole could muster, but he
had his smile warm and welcoming when they entered the coffee shop. Rachel
squealed, dropped Andrew’s hand—which, yeah, also pleased Cole to no end—and
flew toward him for a hug.

Standing, he opened his arms and caught her when she landed.
Pulled her in tight to him and squeezed. Her scent, a delicious mix of spice and
fruit and winter, wrapped around him, securing the knowledge that Rachel
belonged in
his
arms.

Soft hair, damp from the snow, brushed his jaw as she
whispered, “I’m so happy to see you. It’s been too long.”

“Good to see you, too,” he said. “And it’s always too
long.”

She stepped out of his arms and turned toward Andrew to
introduce them. Her pretty blue eyes softened and a glow entered them that Cole
had only seen once before—in the seconds before their solitary kiss. Well, hell.
So far, nothing was adding up the way he’d hoped.

Widening his smile, as fake as it might be, Cole reached out to
shake Andrew’s hand. A faint smirk colored Andrew’s expression, but he met
Cole’s hand with his own and—surprising Cole—squeezed a tad harder than
required. And then, harder still, as if out to prove his machismo.

Immature, possibly, but Cole wasn’t about to ignore the
challenge. He tightened his hold incrementally, smiling all the while, knowing
he could outlast just about anyone in the handshake wars. It took all of fifteen
seconds, maybe twenty, before Andrew gave up and released his grip.

Score one for the home team.

“Good to meet you,
Kyle,
” Andrew
said as he flexed his fingers. “It’s nice to finally put a face to the man that
Rachel considers a brother.”

“Friend. Best friend,” Rachel interjected. “But yes, I made it
clear how important
Cole
is to me. And now we’re all
here! Isn’t this wonderful?”

“Wonderful,” Cole replied, resisting the childish urge to punch
“the one” in the face. He nodded toward the table and retook his seat, saying,
“Glad to meet you, too,
Andy
. Up until a week ago, I
hadn’t heard one word about you, so I’m sure you’ll understand my concern...and
my questions. Seeing I’m ‘like a brother’ to Rachel, it’s my duty to look out
for her welfare.”

Andrew scowled but didn’t immediately respond. He helped Rachel
with her coat before removing his own. Once they were seated, he refocused on
Cole. “Oh, I understand,” he said with a nuance of sarcasm. “I think this will
be fun...getting to know each other. Don’t you?”

Rachel glanced at Cole and then at Andrew and then back to
Cole, her eyes beseeching him to ease the awkwardness, rather than edging it
on.

“Absolutely.” Cole lifted his coffee mug in a faux toast,
deciding he’d give Andrew one more chance at playing nice. For Rachel’s
sake.

But if “the one” continued to push at Cole’s buttons, he’d pony
up and meet him at the gaming table. Even if he didn’t, Cole now knew he was in
this for the duration. Somewhere in between seeing Rachel and having her in his
arms, he’d made a decision. He was done waiting for the right time, the right
words, the right moment, or the right anything.

This was war.

* * *

Well,
that
had been a rocky
start.

Rachel Merriday leaned back in her seat to wait as Cole and
Andrew went to get their coffees. Would they find a way to get along? Certainly,
once Andrew realized he had no reason to be envious of Cole, he would relax.
Cole, she knew, had simply responded to Andrew’s slight antagonistic attitude,
and when that ended, would be more than happy to meet him halfway.

Or so she hoped.

The two had a lot in common, not that either one of the
stubborn fools would believe that on her say-so alone. While they didn’t look
alike in any way whatsoever, they were both handsome, virile men. Where Cole was
dark—black hair, deep brown eyes and what Rachel described as caramel-coated
skin, Andrew was light—ash-blond hair, steely gray eyes and a bordering-on-fair
complexion that was more like her own.

Each was tall and fit, but also in different ways. Cole had the
look of an athlete, lean and naturally strong. Andrew’s slightly more muscular
physique came from hours spent in the gym each week and a rigorous low-fat,
low-calorie, low-everything diet. But, yes. Both handsome. Both virile. Both
sexy as all get-out.

No woman alive could deny that. Or, Rachel amended, no
sane
woman.

The real similarity between them, though, existed beneath their
skin. Sure, Andrew tended to be more serious than Cole, but his heart was just
as big, just as sincere, just as honorable. They were protectors. Guardians,
really, of the people they loved. It was that trait in particular that had first
drawn her to Andrew.

Continued to draw her, if she were to be completely honest.

But was she ready to settle down and have babies with him? She
didn’t know, couldn’t quite get there, couldn’t yet take the leap from wanting
to believing to being. The idea of marrying the wrong person petrified her. The
thought of having children in a loveless marriage pushed her into a blacker
realm of fear.

She knew all too well what that did to a kid, to the adult that
kid became. No. Rachel couldn’t—wouldn’t—make the same mistakes her parents had.
Incessant arguing behind closed doors, portraying the happy, perfect
couple—family—at public events, using their child to wage war against the
other.

Pretending. Faking it. Smiling when you wanted to cry, scream,
stomp your feet, or...yeah, run away. As far and as fast as your legs could
carry you.

Even so, as crazy as it sounded, Rachel yearned for love and
everything that came with finding the right man. She wanted a family, dammit.
She wanted grocery shopping and carpools, fat babies who would become mouthy
teenagers, school bake sales and PTA meetings, picnics and backyard barbecues,
and she wanted all of that with a man who loved her senseless.

Almost without thought, her eyes landed on Cole, and her heart
sort of liquefied and slid to her knees. She’d screwed up there, she knew. And
that screw-up had possibly caused her to lose out on something amazing. Maybe
even something life-altering.

They were okay now, mostly, she thought. But her regret lived
on. And that was why, despite her misgivings, she refused to run away from
Andrew. The fear curdling in her belly, keeping her awake at night whenever she
considered a future with Andrew, was the same exact fear that had propelled her
to run away from her sole regret.

From Cole.

Rachel pushed out a ragged sigh. Her friendship with Cole made
more sense than a lost opportunity, and was certainly far more important than a
relationship that had never existed. Their friendship was real. Solid. Lasting.
That brief flame so long ago? Meaningless.

Of course being here would stir up old memories. One year ago,
she’d had all these
possibilities
in her head when
Cole had asked her to visit for the holidays. But he’d made it clear—crystal,
even—that it was their friendship he valued, had missed. Not the other.

And then Andrew had walked into her life and dazzled her with
his charm and sweetness. With the traits that reminded her of Cole, and those
that didn’t.
He
desired her.
He
talked about making a life together. That was real. That was
solid. Was it lasting? Maybe.

That was what this trip was really about. She felt sure she
could find a way to be head over heels with Andrew by Christmas, here in her
favorite city, with an up-close and personal reminder of what she’d lost due to
fear.

All she had to do was relax and stop thinking—analyzing—so
much, open her heart and let herself take the tumble. How hard could it be?

Feeling somewhat calmer, Rachel tried to catch the men’s
attention by gesturing toward the restrooms. Cole noticed, smiled and nodded,
and returned to talking with Andrew. She waited for Andrew to glance her way,
but he didn’t.

He was too focused on Cole, on whatever Cole was saying. Maybe,
without her presence, they’d found some common ground. She hoped so. Otherwise,
the next few weeks were going to be even tougher than she’d expected. And
that... Well, that wouldn’t help her cause at all.

Chapter Two

R
achel took her time freshening up, needing
a few minutes of privacy to settle her churning emotions. When she returned to
the table, the men were waiting silently with rigid shoulders and hard, stony
jaws. Okay, so that was a no to them finding some common ground.

She slid into place next to Andrew and wrapped her hand around
the whipped-cream, syrup-drizzled cappuccino sitting in front of her. Unsure of
how to proceed, she sipped her coffee slowly, her mind thinking of and rejecting
possible topics of conversation.

“This is so good,” she said, infusing brightness into her tone.
“What did you two get?”

“Black coffee,” they both said at the same time, in identical
flat inflections.

Aha! Common ground. Going with it, Rachel said, “Well, they
have great coffee here.”

“They do.” Cole’s lips twitched into an almost grin. “Want me
to get you some?”

“But I—”

“Because what you’re drinking,” Andrew said matter-of-factly,
“isn’t coffee.”

Cole’s grin widened a hair. “Nope. What you have there, Rachel,
is dessert.”

“Wow, like minds and all that.” Rachel took another hefty
swallow of her “dessert,” and said, “Is this one of those ‘real men don’t eat
quiche’ sort of things? Or in this case, real men don’t drink fancy
coffees?”

“Nah. I like quiche.” Cole picked up a napkin, leaned across
the table and wiped the corner of Rachel’s mouth. The touch was quick and
effortless, but a flood of warmth overtook her just the same. “A little whipped
cream was...er...anyway, it’s gone now.”

She felt more than saw Andrew stiffen beside her. In another
second, his arm was cradled over her shoulders. He tipped her chin toward him
and kissed her. Also quick. Also effortless.

“There.
Now
it’s all gone.” Andrew
settled into his prior position, keeping his arm snug around her. “I hope that
didn’t make you uncomfortable, Kyle. She’s just so kissable, I couldn’t help
myself.”

“Not at all,” Cole said with a good ole boy grin and a laidback
shrug. “Nothing there to feel embarrassed about. Why, I’ve given my mother the
same type of affectionate peck in public on more than one occasion.” He winked
at Rachel. “My sister, too, now that I think about it.”

“Didn’t say I was embarrassed.” Andrew shifted an inch closer
to Rachel. “Some people dislike public displays of affection. I belatedly
thought you might be one of them.”

“Nope.” Again with the shrug. “But I appreciate your
concern.”

“Wow, is it cold outside!” Rachel blurted before Andrew could
respond. She faked a shiver. “So...cold. I still haven’t warmed up from
the...um...short walk here from the car.”

“We could be in Hawaii right now, sipping mai tais by the
ocean.” Andrew kissed Rachel again, this time on the top of her head. “If you’re
having second thoughts, we could be on a plane tomorrow. All you have to do is
say the word.”

Cole’s eyes narrowed in annoyance. Rachel understood why. She
and Cole had made plans
before
Andrew had asked to
join her...which he hadn’t done until after Rachel had refused to cancel this
visit to go with him to Hawaii.

She guessed Andrew saw that as choosing Cole over him, but that
wasn’t the case. Not really. Mostly, it was about going home for the holidays.
Because in many ways, Steamboat Springs was the closest she’d ever had to a real
home.

Due to Cole and his family, though, not hers.

“I’m not having second thoughts, but I like the idea of going
to Hawaii for your birthday in May. If you still want to.”

“Of course I do.” Andrew’s voice was smooth. “I simply wanted
to give you the option, now that you’ve seen your friend.”

“Thank you, but I’m good. And we’ll have fun here!” She patted
Andrew’s arm. “You’ll soon see why I love Steamboat Springs so much, especially
at Christmas.”

“You’ve never been here before, Andy?” Cole relaxed in his
seat, looking for all the world as a man completely at ease. “Odd, but I swore I
recognized you when you walked in. A lot of people come through here every
year...thought maybe you’d vacationed with an ex-girlfriend. Or, perhaps, an
ex-wife?”

Good grief. If it wasn’t one thing, it was another. “Andrew
doesn’t have any ex-wives.”

“And I never will. I don’t believe in divorce.”

“Who does? I doubt anyone marries believing they’ll divorce,”
Cole said in a conversational, let’s-get-to-know-each-other manner. “But divorce
happens. Sometimes, folks marry too young, pick the wrong person, make mistakes
in the heat of the moment. Sometimes, a relationship becomes so messy that
divorce becomes the only option that makes any sense.”

He spoke from experience. His brother Dylan was divorced. In
his case, they were married too young, she cheated and became pregnant, and ran
off with the other guy. So while Rachel didn’t believe in divorce, either, she
agreed with Cole’s take.

Heck, she’d be the first to stand up and cheer if her parents
untied the matrimonial knot.

“You’re right, but only to a point. A lot of those scenarios
can be written off as the result of poor decisions before a proposal is
given...or accepted.” Andrew clasped her hand tightly in his. “When I put a ring
on a woman’s finger, it will be forever.”

Cole leveled a weighted, questioning stare on Rachel. “Life can
often be...unexpected. It’s how each person reacts to some of those moments that
can make or break a relationship.” Pausing, he bent his head ever so slightly
toward Andrew, but kept his sinfully dark eyes glued to hers. “You can analyze
all you want, think every last thing through, and you still won’t know for sure
until you’re in hip-deep. In my opinion, of course.”

The urge to squirm came on strong, but she ignored it. Was he
referring to her littered-with-broken-relationships past, or was he sending her
some type of a hidden message regarding Andrew? Darn if she knew. For not the
first time in Rachel’s life, she wished she could read Cole’s thoughts.

“Anyway,” she said, drawing the word out slowly, “Andrew hasn’t
been to this part of Colorado before, so I have a lot to show him. I can’t wait
to take him skiing.”

One of Cole’s eyebrows shot up. He looked at Andrew. “Is that
so? Are you a skier?”

“No, I’m not. But—”

“Snowboarding, then?”

“No,” Andrew repeated. “I’ve skied before, naturally, but my
skill level is that of a beginner. But for Rachel, I’m willing to give the sport
another try.”

Nodding enthusiastically, Cole said, “That’s good. Rachel loves
to ski...snowboard...ice skate.” Pure pleasure gleamed in his voice, in his
eyes. “And, going back to your earlier comment, sharing the same interests is
important in any successful relationship. Again, in my opinion.”

Andrew sat up straighter. “Which is why I’m excited to give the
sport another try. As I said.”

“Well, what you said,” Cole drawled, “was that you were
willing
to try. Not quite the same as excited.”

She was, maybe, three seconds away from clobbering them both.
Right on top of their manly heads. “There are lots of interests that Andrew and
I share. We bike, go to the gym...um...horses! I love horseback riding and
Andrew is an excellent horseman. He grew up on a ranch in Texas.”

“That’s great to hear. Plenty of horseback riding to have here
in Colorado. I still think, though—” Cole broke off and scratched his jaw “—I
know! How about if we pick a day and hit the bunny slope, Andrew? We can go over
the basics, get you up to speed, as it were.”

“I can handle a bit more than the bunny slope,” Andrew replied
in a dry manner. “And frankly, I’d rather have my girlfriend as my teacher. I
think of it as one more way for us to grow closer. Which is, after all, an
important aspect of this visit.”

Cole glanced at Rachel and her frisson of alarm escalated. She
knew that expression. It meant trouble with a capital T. Darn it all, what had
he latched on to now? She reached toward him, intent on grabbing his arm to
divert his attention, but he leaned away before she could get a proper hold. Her
fingers skimmed against his skin and the mere touch sent a bolt of heady
awareness through her body, startling her with its strength.

“Wow, guys. I’m sorry to hear that. I mean,” he said with a
slow, methodical beat, “if you need a vacation to grow closer, something must
not be going well. Let me know if I can be of any help...anything at all, just
say the word.”

“Our relationship is fine,” Andrew snapped. “If there were
problems, I wouldn’t assume a vacation could fix them.”

“We’re absolutely fine!” Rachel said a good deal louder than
necessary. Andrew’s declaration stung, though. She had, indeed, brought Andrew
with her in the hopes the time away, the time together, would erase her
reservations. “Just fine.”

“Ah, hell. I didn’t mean to hit a sore spot.” Cole held his
hands up, gesturing a truce. “Forget I said anything. I’m sure you guys
are...
fine
. Just as you’ve both said.”

Itchy with frustration and nerves, Rachel did the only thing
she could think of: she changed the subject. Again. “How’s business at the store
this year, Cole?”

“Same as always during the winter months” was his quick,
humor-ridden, reply. “Lots of folks in and out. Between rentals and new sales,
classes, and private lessons, we’re doing well.”

Andrew tightened his hold on Rachel’s shoulder. “That’s right.
You work for your parents now. I hear you were quite the skier in your day, so
I’d imagine the unexpected, even traumatic, change in careers could
feel...stifling? Limiting, perhaps?”

Whoa. Rachel pulled out of Andrew’s grasp, shocked by his
words, his rudeness and his insinuation. He was never like this, never purposely
hurtful to anyone. Jealous or not, uncomfortable or not, he’d gone too far.

“You don’t understand how the Foster family functions, Andrew,”
she said. “Cole and his siblings are an integral part of the
family
-owned businesses. They manage, work and own
them together. Isn’t that right, Cole?”

“That’s correct,” Cole answered, still appearing more amused
than anything else. “But no, Andrew, there isn’t anything stifling about the
arrangement. I’m grateful to my folks for what their hard work and commitment
has provided me and my brothers and sister with.”

After a lengthy pause, Andrew combed his fingers through his
short hair and sighed. “My comment was uncalled for. I apologize.”

“No harm done,” Cole said with ease. “My family is exceedingly
close. Sometimes, a bit too close, but we are what we are and I wouldn’t want
anything to change.”

“That’s important,” Andrew said, his voice almost gruff. “My
family...isn’t as close. You’re a lucky man.”

In a heartbeat, Rachel forgave Andrew for his jab. Something
had happened to put distance between him and his family. She didn’t know the
details, but she knew he missed them.

“I am lucky,” Cole agreed. “In many ways.”

“I consider myself fortunate, as well, for finding Rachel.”
Andrew exhaled a breath, and when he spoke again, she heard the man she’d been
dating for the past few months instead of the stranger he’d become upon meeting
Cole. “Are you seeing anyone special, Cole?”

Every one of Rachel’s knotted muscles relaxed. The posturing
was finally over, thank goodness and hallelujah. Maybe now, the two men would
find some true common ground.

She waited for Cole to answer Andrew’s question, but when he
didn’t, she did for him, saying, “Nope. Cole isn’t dating anyone.”

After all, Cole would’ve told her if he’d met someone. He
always had in the past. And in truth, Cole rarely dated. It was something she
used to tease him about, way back when.

A prickle of apprehension appeared at the nape of her neck a
millisecond before Cole said, “Actually, Rach...I’ve been meaning to tell you—”
He paused, locked his vision with hers and thrummed his fingers against the
table. The rat-a-tat-tat beat mimicked the pounding of her heart. “There is
someone in my life. Someone special.”

No way. She must have heard him wrong. “You’re seeing someone?
Someone...special? Really?”

One by one, each muscle in her body tensed again as she waited,
as she tried to come to grips with the possibility that Cole was involved in a
serious relationship. With someone special, someone important.

Someone who wasn’t her.

“Yes,” he said firmly, still looking directly, almost
intensely, at her. “There is an important woman in my life. She might even
be—no, she definitely is—the one for me.”

“Okay.” Rachel swallowed and tried to push past the nausea that
had crawled into her throat. Why did this bother her so much? They were friends.
She’d accepted that and had moved on. She shouldn’t care. At all. “Well,
that’s...great news! Why didn’t you tell me before?”

Of course, she hadn’t mentioned Andrew until a week ago, so who
was she to throw stones? Relationships were private. Cole was a private man. He
had the right to keep anything to himself for as long as he chose. Solid logic,
but his secrecy bugged her. A lot.

Cole shrugged. “You’re hearing about her now, and—” Andrew’s
cell phone buzzed, stopping Cole short.

“I need to take this,” Andrew said after glancing at the
display. He stood. “Excuse me for a minute.”

She watched Andrew step away from the table. Refocusing on
Cole, she said, “Go on. What’s her name? And what do you mean she’s the one for
you? When...um, when did you meet her?”

“None of that’s important right now.” Cole angled his body
toward her, so they were eye to eye, and clasped Rachel’s hands in his. The heat
of his touch didn’t come close to thawing her sudden chill. “I’m a goner,
Rachel. I’ve fallen in love and there’s no looking back.”

“You’re joking, right?”

“What do you think?”

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