“I don’t know.” Eva spoke up again, winking at Bailey and Serena to let them know she was teasing. “There were a lot of people at the community center today who believe you are.”
Serena rolled her eyes. “Only because we were dressed up as Santa and Mrs. Claus.”
“There’s nothing wrong with a little role-playing to spice things up in the bedroom,” Brenna asserted.
Serena shook her head, her cheeks redder than the dress she’d worn during their role-playing that afternoon. “I should have stayed home tonight.”
“I’m just teasing you,” Brenna said, immediately contrite. “Although Travis and I fell in love for real while we were only pretending to be engaged.”
“I cheered for both of you on The Great Roundup ,” Serena admitted.
“Then you saw me win the grand prize,” Travis chimed in.
Bailey frowned. Though reality shows weren’t his thing, it would have been impossible to be in Rust Creek Falls the previous year and not follow the events that played out when two local residents were vying for the big money on the television show. “It was Brenna who won the million dollars.”
“That’s true,” Travis confirmed, sliding an arm across his wife’s shoulders and drawing her into his embrace. “But I won Brenna.”
She smiled up at him. “And I won you.”
“And I need some air,” Bailey decided.
“Me, too,” Serena said, pushing back her chair.
They exited the main reception area but didn’t venture much farther than that. Leaving the building would require collecting their coats and bundling up against the frigid Montana night.
“They don’t mean to be obnoxious,” Bailey said when he and Serena were alone. “At least, I don’t think they do.”
She laughed softly. “I didn’t think they were obnoxious. I thought they were adorable.”
“Really?”
“Yeah. I mean, I watched The Great Roundup , but you never know how much of those reality shows is real, how much is staged, how much is selectively edited. It’s nice to see that they truly are head over heels in love with one another.”
“For now,” Bailey remarked.
Serena frowned. “You don’t think they’ll last?”
He shrugged. “I don’t think the odds are in their favor.”
“Love isn’t about odds,” she said. “It’s a leap of faith.”
“A leap that frequently ends with one or both parties hitting the ground with a splat.”
“Spoken like someone who has some experience with the splat,” she noted.
He nodded. “Because I do.”
“Of course, most people don’t make it through life without a few bumps and bruises.”
“Bumps and bruises usually heal pretty easily,” he said.
Bailey’s matter-of-fact statement told Serena that the heartbreak he’d experienced had left some pretty significant scars. She also suspected that the romance gone wrong had reopened wounds caused by the loss of his parents and the separation from his family when he was barely more than a teenager.
“Usually,” she agreed.
“I’m sorry,” he said, after another moment had passed.
The spontaneous and unexpected apology surprised her. “Why are you sorry?”
“Because I obviously said something that upset you at lunch today.”
“I can be overly sensitive at times,” she admitted.
“Does that mean I’m forgiven?” he asked hopefully.
She nodded. “You’re forgiven.”
“That’s a relief,” he told her. “We wouldn’t want the kids of Rust Creek Falls Elementary School to worry about any obvious tension between Santa and Mrs. Claus.”
“I’m not sure they care about Santa’s marital status so long as he delivers their presents on Christmas Eve.”
“Which he wouldn’t be able to do if the missus got possession of the sleigh and custody of the reindeer in the divorce,” Bailey pointed out.
“Then he better do everything he can to keep her happy,” she suggested.
“If Santa had a secret formula for keeping a woman happy, it would top every man’s Christmas list,” he said.
“Ha ha.”
“I’m not joking,” he assured her. “But in the interests of keeping you happy, can I buy you a drink?”
“No, thanks. I had a glass of wine with dinner and that’s my limit.”
“One glass?”
She nodded.
“Okay, how about a dance?”
“The words sound like an invitation,” she remarked. “But the tone suggests that you’re hoping the offer will be declined.”
“Maybe, for your sake, I’m hoping it will,” he said. “Because I’m not a very good dancer.”
“Then why did you ask?”
He shrugged. “Because it might seem like everyone else is paired off, but I have noticed that there are a few single guys in attendance and I know they’re just waiting for me to turn my back for a second so they can move in on you.”
“Should I be flattered? Or should I get out my pepper spray?”
“Maybe you should just dance with me,” he suggested.
So Serena took the hand he proffered and let him lead her to the dance floor. But the minute he took her in his arms, she knew that her acquiescence had been a mistake. Being close to him, she felt those unwanted feelings stir again.
She’d had a few boyfriends in her twenty-five years, and even a couple of lovers, but she’d never really been in love. And though she didn’t know much about Bailey, the intensity of the attraction she felt for him warned her that he might be the man she finally and completely fell for.
But she also knew that he didn’t want to be that man, and his brief and blunt comments about his marriage gone wrong should serve as a warning to her. Which was too bad, because she really liked being in his arms. And notwithstanding his claim that he wasn’t a good dancer, he moved well.
As the last notes of the song trailed away, she tipped her head back to look at him.
The heels she wore added three inches to her height, so that if he lowered his head just a little, his mouth would brush against hers.
She really wanted him to kiss her.
But they were barely more than strangers and in a very public setting. And yet, in that moment, everyone and everything else faded into the background so that there was only the two of them.
Then he did tip his head, so that his mouth hovered a fraction of an inch above hers. And she held her breath, waiting...
A guitar riff blasted through the air—an abrupt change of tempo for the couples on the dance floor—and the moment was lost.
Serena stepped back. “I—I’m going to check out the auction items.”
So Bailey returned to the table without her.
“Watching you and Serena on the dance floor, I could see why Brenna thought that you guys were together,” Luke commented.
“Why were you watching us instead of dancing with your wife?” Bailey asked his brother.
“Because I was working at Daisy’s at 4:00 a.m.,” Eva responded to the question. “And my feet are very happy to not be dancing right now. But he’s right,” she continued. “You and Serena look good together.”
“Except that we’re not together,” he reminded his brother and sister-in-law.
They exchanged a glance.
“Denial,” Eva said.
Luke nodded.
“Look, it’s great that the two of you found one another and happiness together, but not everyone else in the world wants the same thing,” Bailey told them.
“You mean they’re not ready to admit that they want the same thing,” Eva said.
Bailey just shook his head.
“A year ago, I was a skeptic, too,” Luke said. “And then I met Eva.”
The smile she gave her husband was filled with love and affection. And maybe it did warm Bailey’s heart to see Luke and Eva so happy. And Danny and Annie. And Jamie and Fallon. And his sister Bella and Hudson. And maybe he was just the tiniest bit envious.
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