* * * * *
   Joey McIntyre hadn’t changed a bit. 
   That was what she’d thought when she’d walked into the tacky cowboy saloon. Hot hometown honeys dripping from him like a rich widow’s jewelry. He’d always been a player. She oughtta know, he’d played her like a fiddle.
   A willing, stupid, naive, starry-eyed fiddle. Yeah, that. Until he drove the bow right through her heart. 
   “Doesn’t matter.” She walked up to her van and unlocked it with the key fob. As always, before she got in, she took a second to love the thing. It was glossy black with dark burgundy swooshes. And there was a very Bat-signal-like logo on it, unless you looked close enough to notice it was a winged-V in a white oval. White lettering followed the curve, proclaiming it The VetMobile. She opened the door and got in, running a hand over the two-tone “pleather” seats that matched the paint job. Even the car seat in the back matched. You know, underneath its layer of crust, composed of Goldfish crumbs and apple juice. 
   There was no reason, she told herself, to believe he was anything but what he’d always been—a spoiled, rich, self-centered playboy who didn’t have a care in the world for anybody but himself. Worse yet, he liked it that way.  
   She imagined his face when he’d first looked at her. God, he was still just as beautiful to her as he’d always been. The tall lanky frame, those long arms that used to wrap all the way around her and then some. And his sweet face, and chocolate brown eyes and little boy lashes. God she loved looking at that face of his. Always had.
   That face could charm the moon out of the sky.
   She started the van, flipped on the headlights, and then the heater. It was chilly tonight. And then she backed carefully out of the gaudy saloon’s parking lot and headed back onto the winding, narrow road. It turned into Main Street once it hit the village. She didn’t have to go that far, though, hanging a right onto Church Street, and then past the little white church with the big red doors, and on up to the B and B—make that boarding house—where she was staying.
   It was a pretty Victorian in a violet shade so subtle it seemed white at nighttime, and its elaborate trim work was decked out in pine green, minty pink, and baby blue. The sign that swung from a wrought iron holder had matching wood-trimmed edges, all scrolled like the trim on the house, and read Peabody’s Boarding House. Ida Mae Peabody’s holiday decorations were far more understated than most of the others in Big Falls. She had a single white electric candle in each window and a giant wreath on the front door. Period.
   Emily shut off the van and hopped out. The front door swung open before she even reached it, and Ida Mae herself stood there, holding a cherub with burnt gold curls on her hip. But the angel quickly wriggled free and ran toward the porch steps. Emily reached them first, and scooped her up before she could fall. 
   Matilda didn’t even notice her brush with disaster. 
   “You’re supposed to be asleep, young lady!” Emily said, closing her eyes and just inhaling the smell of Tilda’s hair. The greatest smell in the known universe.
   “I waked up!” Matilda said.
   “I’m sorry I wasn’t there. I had to see someone.”
   “Was it Santa?”
   “No, honey. It wasn’t Santa.”
   Matilda pouted. “But we have to find him and tell him so he’ll be able to find me!”
   “And we will. I promise.”
   “Tomorrow?” Tilda asked.
   “Yes,” she promised. “Tomorrow.” 
   Tilda hugged Emily’s neck a little tighter. “I love you, Mommy.”
   “I love you, too, baby.”
   Also Available
   The McIntyre Men
   Oklahoma Christmas Blues
   Oklahoma Moonshine
   Oklahoma Starshine
   Oklahoma Sunshine (coming soon!)
   The Oklahoma All-Girl Brands
   The Brands Who Came for Christmas
   Brand-New Heartache
   Secrets and Lies
   A Mommy For Christmas
   One Magic Summer
   Sweet Vidalia Brand
   A Brand of Christmas
   Buckles, Boots and Mistletoe
   The Texas Brands
   The Littlest Cowboy
   The Baddest Virgin in Texas
   Badlands Bad Boy
   Long Gone Lonesome Blues
   The Lone Cowboy
   Lone Star Lonely
   The Outlaw Bride
   Texas Angel
   Texas Homecoming
    Wings In The Night: Reborn
   Twilight Guardians
   Twilight Vendetta
   The Rhiannon Chronicles
   Edge of Darkness
   The Fairies of Rush
   Fairytale
   Forever Enchanted
   Once Upon A Time
   Standalones
   The Bride Wore A Forty-Four
   The Fairy’s Wish
   The Witch Collection
   Gingerbread Man
   Annie’s Hero
   Miranda’s Viking
   Everything She Does is Magic
   Stargazer
   Witch Moon
   Zombies! A Love Story
   Magic By Moonlight
   The Immortal Witches
   Eternity
   Infinity
   Destiny
   Eternal Love: The Immortal Witch Series
   And MAGGIE’S NON-FICTION
   Shayne On You
   Magick and the Law of Attraction: A User’s Guide
   About the Author    
   New York Times bestselling author Maggie Shayne has published more than 60 novels and 23 novellas. She has written for 7 publishers and 2 soap operas, has racked up 15 Rita Award nominations and actually, finally, won the damn thing in 2005.    
   Maggie lives in a beautiful, century old, happily haunted farmhouse named “Serenity” in the wildest wilds of Cortland County, NY, with her husband and soul mate, Lance. They share a pair of English Mastiffs, Dozer & Daisy, and a little English Bulldog, Niblet, and the wise guardian and guru of them all, the feline Glory, who keeps the dogs firmly in their places. Maggie’s a Wiccan high priestess (legal clergy even) and an avid follower of the Law of Attraction    
   Connect with Maggie
   Maggie’s Website
   WingsInTheNight.com
   Maggie’s Bliss Blog
   Maggie’s Coffee House Blog
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