For a moment Rory couldn’t say a word.
She couldn’t believe she was actually where she had so badly wanted to be. In Erik’s arms. For some strange reason, her throat had suddenly gone raw.
She swallowed, then took a deep breath. “Erik?” she finally said. “Thank you.”
“For holding you?”
“For all of it. But, yes. For this, too.”
“What’s wrong?” he asked when she started to cry.
“Nothing. Honest,” she insisted. “For the first time in…forever there isn’t a thing wrong.”
“Then why tears?”
Because of what you let me feel, she thought. “Because I’m tired,” was easier to admit.
She felt his lips against the top of her head. “Then, go to sleep.”
“I don’t want to. I don’t want to miss you holding me.”
“You shouldn’t say things like that.”
“Why not?”
“Because you’ll make me forget why I shouldn’t do this,” he murmured, and brushed his mouth over hers.
The Hunt For Cinderella: Seeking Prince Charming
Her Holiday
Prince Charming
Christine Flynn
CHRISTINE FLYNN admits to being interested in just about everything, which is why she considers herself fortunate to have turned her interest in writing into a career. She feels that a writer gets to explore it all and, to her, exploring relationships—especially the intense, bittersweet or even lighthearted relationships between men and women—is fascinating.
MILLS & BOON
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For the lovely ladies
who have made the “Hunt” happen,
and everyone who believes in the fairy tale.
Contents
Prologue
“What’s on your Christmas list this year? No matter how big or how small, you’re sure to find what you’re looking for at Seattle’s one-stop answer to all your holiday—”
With a quick flick of the dial, Rory silenced the cheerful voice suddenly booming from her car radio. In an attempt to drown out her worries while she waited to pick up her son from kindergarten, she’d turned the music to a decibel she’d never have considered had her five-year-old been in the vehicle.
The ad had just brought to mind the one thing she’d been desperately trying not to think about.
She’d hoped to make the holiday special for her little boy this year. Not just special, but after last year’s unquestionably awful Christmas, something wonderful. Magical.
As of three days ago, however, she was no longer sure how she would keep a roof over their heads, much less put a tree under it. Due to downsizing, her telecommuting services as a legal transcriptionist for Hayes, Bleaker & Stein were no longer required. She’d needed that job to pay for little things like food and gas and to qualify for a mortgage.
Without a job, she had no hope of buying the little Cape Cod she’d thought so perfect for her and little Tyler. She had no hope of buying or renting any house at all. Since the sale of the beautiful home she’d shared with her husband closed next week, that left her four days to find an apartment and a job that would help her pay for it.
A quick tap ticked on her driver’s side window.
Through the foggy glass, a striking blonde wearing studious-looking horn-rimmed glasses and winter-white fur smiled at her. The woman didn’t look at all familiar to Rory. Thinking she must be the mom of an older student, since she knew all the moms in the kindergarten class, she lowered her window and smiled back.
Chill air rushed into the car as the woman bent at the waist to make eye contact. “You’re Aurora Jo Linfield?”
Rory hesitated. The only time she ever used her full name was on legal documents. And she rarely used Aurora at all. “I am.”
“I’m Felicity Granger.” Hiking her designer bag higher on her shoulder, she stuck her hand through the open window. The cold mist glittered around her, clung, jewel-like, to her pale, upswept hair. “But please, call me Phil. I’m an associate of Cornelia Hunt. You’ve heard of Cornelia, haven’t you?”
Rory shook the woman’s hand, watched her retract it. “I’ve heard of her,” she admitted, wondering what this woman—or the other—could possibly want with her. Nearly everyone in Seattle had heard of Mrs. Hunt, the former Cornelia Fairchild. She’d been the childhood sweetheart of computer genius Harry Hunt, the billionaire founder of software giant HuntCom. Rory recalled hearing of their marriage last summer, even though she’d been struggling within her fractured little world at the time. Media interest in their six-decade relationship had been huge.
“May I help you with something?”
“Oh, I’m here to help you,” the woman insisted. “Mr. Hunt heard of your situation—”
Harry