The Christmas Countdown - Softcover

Cassidy, Holly

 
9780593716267: The Christmas Countdown

Inhaltsangabe

From the author of The Christmas Wager comes a charming holiday rom com about a young, recently heartbroken woman who is tasked by her sister to complete Advent calendar challenges in the lead up to Christmas to reignite her belief in herself, the holidays, and love again.

She’s given up on love and Christmas…but fate has other plans.

All Callie wants for Christmas is to hibernate. She's still reeling from being dumped by her childhood sweetheart, and under no circumstances will she go home for the holidays considering her ex will be right next door with his new, perfect partner. Callie is officially in grinch mode, but her meddling sister, Anita, won’t let her give up on life, love, and Christmas quite so easily.

Anita stages a Christmas intervention for Callie with a homemade Advent calendar challenge—cheerful tasks to push Callie out of her comfort zone and into the holiday spirit, inspired by a childhood tradition. Callie reluctantly plays along, but when she comes face-to-face with a charming baker who just might be the spoonful of sugar she needs, her strict rules on love and the holidays are tested. As they strike a deal to do the activities together, could the twenty four little doors on Callie’s Advent calendar not only open up one, but two closed-off hearts?

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Holly Cassidy is the pen name for internationally bestselling author Hannah Mary McKinnon. Her suspense novels include The Neighbors, Her Secret Son, Sister Dear, You Will Remember Me, Never Coming Home, The Revenge List, and Only One Survives (coming July 2024). McKinnon was born in England, grew up in Switzerland, and now lives in Ontario, Canada with her husband and three sons. The Christmas Wager was her first novel writing as Holly Cassidy.

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Chapter 1

Saturday, December 1

Bright stars twinkled in the cloudless sky above, making me instinctively tuck my chin deep into the soft woolen folds of my scarf. I eased my Ford Fiesta into the parking spot behind the three-story red-brick Victorian where I lived with my sister and cut the engine, looking forward to getting back upstairs.

I'd only left my snuggly cocoon an hour ago to pick up takeout and groceries, and although it was a quick drive from the store to our place off Bloomfield Avenue in the center of Fallbrook, my fingers had gone numb from the cold.

Having arrived in town at the end of March this year, I wasn't quite accustomed to the freeze-your-buns-off winter temperatures in upstate New York. If this Saturday-the first day of December-was anything to go by, it would soon feel like I'd chosen to relocate my life to a freezer.

Earlier today, my sister had reminded me she was going out for dinner this evening. I'd already decided that once she'd left, I'd head to my cozy bedroom with its teal feature wall and floating shelf filled with my trio of vibrant green succulents and leafy, two-toned pothos. I'd get comfy, listen to my latest chill-out playlist, and continue working on my 3D jigsaw puzzle of the RMS Titanic, a Valentine's Day gift from my now ex-boyfriend, Oliver, which I hadn't been able to bring myself to touch for months.

More recent hindsight had made me wonder if the replica of the ill-fated ship had been a subliminal message on his behalf, considering how our relationship had hit its own proverbial iceberg not long after.

We'd been a couple for a decade-ever since I was in eleventh grade and Oliver in twelfth. Both of us had grown up in Pineville, Virginia-a quaint little sleeper town an eight-hour drive away-and we'd moved to Fallbrook together following his promotion and transfer to the city.

Fallbrook was a pretty place, with a population of around fifty thousand, and a cool vibe coming from the vast number of students at the local college. I'd loved my new home, had arrived full of excitement and high hopes, with big dreams for our future, ready to continue building our life together. Getting a job at the same company where Oliver worked had seemed like a fantastic idea, too, but four weeks later my world had imploded when I was gently but unequivocally dumped.

Oliver had sat me down in our newly rented apartment one evening and calmly confessed he'd slowly but surely fallen out of love with me over the past year.

"Why did you want me to come to Fallbrook with you?" I'd sobbed, as he'd whipped out a strategically placed box of tissues from underneath the sofa. "I quit my job. I moved my life for us. For the future we'd always talked about since we were kids."

"I thought the change would help," he said. "I'm sorry, Callie. Really, I am. I was hoping I'd feel differently here . . . but I don't. Please believe me when I say I never meant to hurt you."

I thought he'd change his mind, hoped this was a blip and nothing more, but the next blow was him saying he had feelings for someone else. He'd assured me nothing had happened between them, yet, and the implication of that last word had felt like a hundred shards of glass ripping through my heart.

Thankfully, my sister had already lived in town for a few years, having attended university here and snagging a great local job a week after graduation. When I'd called Anita, she'd not only offered me her spare bedroom, but also both shoulders to cry on.

I didn't need to rely on her as often these days-the seven months since the breakup had given me distance and time to acknowledge my post-Oliver life-but this year had left me emotionally raw and bruised.

No surprise then, that my typically unshakable festive spirit had all but disappeared. As far as I was concerned, I wanted nothing to do with Christmas this time around. In fact, I was actively willing the season to pass.

I heaved a sigh, trying to push away the heaviness in my heart, but before I had time to step out of the car, my cell rang with P!nk's "Trouble," my personalized ringtone for Mom. It was something my sister had recently added, and it made me grin every time. Our mother could be a bit of a meddler on occasion, especially given my current situation.

"Hi, Mom." I sank into my seat and tapped the speaker icon, aiming to inject the right amount of liveliness in my voice. Too much, and she'd ask what was wrong. Too little, and she'd be equally suspicious.

"Callie, darling," Mom said, and I suppressed a sudden pang of homesickness as I imagined her standing in the kitchen of our family home in Pineville. She probably had the faded blue plastic receiver of her old '90s landline phone cradled in the crook of her neck, the long cord stretched out behind her. "How are you?"

"Peachy keen, jelly bean." Whoops. Definitely too much sprightliness. My family knew I loved puns and funny expressions, but I'd never used that one in my life.

"Mm-hmm." She filled the drawn-out sound with motherly skepticism. "Are you with your sister?"

"No, in the car. I just got home. Anita asked me to get groceries. She was at the office this afternoon."

"On a Saturday? She works far too much." Mom tutted, and I couldn't disagree. "Are you at least having fun? Seeing any friends tonight?"

"Oh, yeah. Definitely," I said, omitting the fact that I didn't have many here or that I suspected Anita had sent me on the food run-despite it being her turn-because she wanted me to interact with at least one other human before the weekend was over.

"I see," Mom said, and when she clicked her tongue, it felt as if I'd walked into an expertly laid trap. "In that case, you aren't planning on plopping yourself on the sofa in your pajamas and reading until Monday morning, right?"

Those were the exact words I'd muttered to Anita yesterday when she'd unsuccessfully tried to convince me to go out with her tonight. Traitor. She knew I wasn't in the mood, and it hadn't escaped me how Mom had bestowed her running interference gene on her eldest daughter, a fact my sister consistently denied.

As I contemplated the best response to give my mother, the rich, meaty aroma from the box of spaghetti Bolognese I'd picked up made my stomach rumble. There was no way I'd mention my takeout and jigsaw puzzle plans, or that I wouldn't need to change into my pajamas because they were already underneath my sweatpants.

"Callie?" Mom asked. "Are you still there?"

"Yeah, sorry." I refocused on our conversation and decided to fib. "I'm not sure what I'm doing tonight."

"All right, dear. Then let's talk about Christmas. Have you given any more thought to coming home for the holidays with Anita?"

"Mom, we've already discussed this. I can't."

"You've never missed our Meyer Christmas Eve bash." She paused, seemingly choosing her next words with utmost care. "It won't be the same without you, and while I understand it wouldn't be easy with Oliver and his . . . friend next door, you can't let them ruin your favorite holiday."

"Oliver and his new girlfriend being there isn't the problem."

"Mm-hmm," she said for a second time.

"It isn't," I insisted, wishing it were true. Fact was, when I'd learned a few weeks ago that Oliver and his new squeeze-a bona fide goddess in the form of local TV reporter Sarah Barratt-would be in Pineville over Christmas, it had been the final nail in the going home for the holidays coffin.

While the all-consuming, thick, and stifling breakup fog had mostly subsided, it didn't mean I'd fully recovered. What happened still hurt deeply, and at times I found myself not only wondering why our relationship had ended the way it did, but also how I'd been oblivious to the change in Oliver's feelings for me. Despite almost having...

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ISBN 10:  6600009772 ISBN 13:  9786600009773
Verlag: Gardners, 1996
Softcover