The 12 Days of Christmas Book Blitz and Giveaway Day 9!
Kissing
Strangers
The
Twelve Days of Christmas #9
by
D.S. Dehel
Genre:
Paranormal Historical Romance
Print
Length: 90 pages
Publisher:
eXtasy Books
Publication
Date: December 20, 2019
A
haunting
Christmas tale.
Christmas
of 1899, the world looks forward to new discoveries, new inventions,
and a new century. Wealthy heiress Viola Peery is looking forward to
a new life and a husband, preferably one with a title, since her
father has told her not to return from England without one.
A
New Year’s weekend at Aescton Hall holds promise for Viola and
eight other ladies of wealth. There, ten eligible bachelors will vie
for their hearts and hands during dinners, skating parties, and—of
course—balls. Both the charming Cedric Stanhope and the dashing
Rhys Findlay catch Viola’s eye and pique her interest, and through
flirty tea parties and nightly waltzes, she mulls her decision.
But
one of the men holds a secret that will change her destiny and haunt
her for the rest of her life.
Melancholy
music drifted in from the other room. On the radio, that interesting
looking Mr. Crosby was crooning about his desire for a white
Christmas. Viola shook her head at the romantic nonsense, but the
mental image of a house in the swirling snow caught her by surprise.
Her pencil slipped and marred the angel she had been drawing. She
sighed and tore off the page she had been working on, crumpled it up,
and went to toss it at the wastebasket, but years of training stayed
her hand. In her mind, Vi could hear her governess reprimanding her
for unladylike behavior and see her mother’s disapproving frown,
even though both women had been dead for more than forty
years. Today
had been filled with ghosts, beginning with a dream of dancing and
being held by the person she loved most in the world. She’d woken
with tears on her face. She
shook her head to clear the cobwebs, set the ruined paper aside, and
picked up her favorite pencil. I
remember the first time I saw Aescton Hall. Through the falling snow,
I could just make out the gray stone and long, straight Georgian
facade. Lines flew from her pencil as she lost herself in the past,
trying to capture the beauty of the house decorated for Christmas,
the laughter, and the golden gaslight. “Nana.” Vi
jumped. From the expression on her granddaughter’s face, Dottie
must have said her name several times. “Apologies. Yes, dear? Is it
time to decorate the tree?” Dottie
made a face, then quickly smoothed it over. “No, not until after
Dad gets home from work.” “Oh.”
Vi set down her pencil. “Then how may I help you?” “What
were you humming?” It
was just now that Vi realized her granddaughter was wearing an apron
over pants and a sweater. For a brief second, she was scandalized,
then she recalled wearing pants was socially acceptable in 1955, at
least at home. “Humming? I wasn’t humming.” “Not
to be impolite, but yes, you were.” Dottie hummed a lilting
threequarters rhythm. “The
Rendezvous Waltz.” It had been going through her head as she drew.
Am I losing my mind? She certainly was old enough to do so. “It’s
quite pretty.” Dottie hummed again. “It
was always one of my favorites, at least for dancing.” For a
moment, the room shifted to a ballroom filled with whirling
dancers. “Well.”
Dottie’s words caused the vision to fade. The girl put her hand in
her apron pocket. “Mom asked me to bring down the boxes of
Christmas decorations.” That
explains the cobwebs in her curls. Vi was tempted to brush them away,
but she quashed thoughts of overt affection, as she had been taught.
She gestured at her hair. “I see.” Dottie
caught the meaning and brushed at her dark bob. “I went up one more
time, just to check I hadn’t missed anything, and on the rafter in
the farthest corner, you know, where your trunks are, I found this.”
She pulled her fist out of her pocket. “But, Nana, I could swear it
wasn’t there before.” She uncurled her fingers. A ceramic
ornament lay on her palm. “Is this yours? Mom said she’d never
seen it before.” The
figurine stood four inches high and perhaps two and a half inches
wide. From a faded scarlet ribbon, a waltzing couple dangled. Although the faces were indistinct, their body language implied them
staring adoringly at each other. The woman’s scarlet gown swirled
around her partner’s feet, giving the whole an impression of
movement. With trembling fingers, Vi plucked it from her
granddaughter’s palm. “Yes, that’s me.” Again, the lilting
strains of the waltz and eyes the color of the sea after a storm
filled her mind. “It
is you, or you made it?” Dottie’s forehead wrinkled. “Both.”
Vi set the figurine on the desk and levered herself to her feet.
Gracefulness came hard at seventy-seven years of age. She crossed to
her closet and tugged on the string. Above her head, a lightbulb
snapped to life. There, on her neatly arranged shelf, in the far
corner, sat a hatbox that had once been striped rose and gold, but
now was a lifeless brown and pinkish-gray. She
turned to grab the chair she had been sitting on, but Dottie stopped
her. “I’ll get it.” Dottie picked up the straight-backed chair
and carried it to the closet. “What am I taking down?” “The
hatbox.” Vi pointed. “You may have to move the scrapbooks.”
Those held other stories in them. Dottie
made unladylike noises as she shifted items about, and Vi was tempted
to reprimand her, but she didn’t. The world had changed, and young
women were free to behave uncouthly if they wished. “Here.”
Dottie passed the ancient but still solid box to her
grandmother. “Thank
you. Mind that you don’t slip getting down.” Vi nodded at the
chair, and then she glided to a low table that sat in the middle of
her study and placed the box on it. She slowly sank onto the late
Victorian sofa. Do I want to remember? She found she did. Besides,
the past intruded whether she wanted it to or not. She took a deep
breath and for a moment could feel the ghost of her corset laces.
Then she eased the lid off the box and pulled away the faded pink
tissue paper, and the sensation vanished. Nestled on a bed of cotton
wool were eight figurines similar to the one on the drawing table.
The poses varied, and all of the dresses were different, but these
clearly were a set. “Oh,
Nana.” Dottie’s voice was hushed. “Those are beautiful.” Vi
started. She’d forgotten about her granddaughter. “This was us.”
Long ago.
D.S. Dehel is a lover
of photography, good food, and the Oxford comma. When she is not
immersed in a book, she is mom to her kids and spoiling her rather
pampered feline, Mr. Darcy. She can also be found at the gym training
for her next Spartan race and generally avoiding all adult
responsibility. She adores literary allusions, writing sex scenes,
and British television. Her devoted husband is still convinced she
writes children's books. Please don't enlighten him.
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