Christmas in Lucky Harbor Read online



  He laughed again, then put his lips next to her ear. “Sticking with your story, Tara?”

  She shivered. “That you seduced me? Yes.”

  “We’re even, you know.” He nipped her earlobe with his teeth, making her shiver. “Since you’ve been seducing me since I first met you.” He kissed her just below her jaw then, and along her temple, while she worked on not melting.

  “W—what are you doing?”

  “Seeing how far you’re going to let me go.”

  Get a grip, she ordered herself as he got to the very corner of her mouth, and she took a big grip herself. A two-fisted one. Of him. She was holding him so tight that he couldn’t have pulled away even if he wanted to, and given the rough sound that escaped him, he didn’t want to. “We’re not doing this again,” she said. “You know we’re not.”

  He sucked her bottom lip between his teeth and gave it a light tug. “I do know. I just can’t remember why.”

  She sank her fingers into his hair. It was thick and silky and wavy, and she loved it. “Because—”

  He kissed her long and hard, his hand sliding low onto her back, pulling her in closer to him.

  “Ford. Ford, wait.”

  He smiled against her lips. “Let me guess.” His mouth ghosted over hers with each word. “You have something else to say.”

  “Yes! You’re…” She couldn’t think. “Trouble. You know that? You’re bad-for-me trouble.”

  “Maybe. But I’m only trouble some of the time,” he said in that husky, coaxing voice that made her want to give him whatever he asked for.

  “And what are you when you’re not trouble?” she managed. “A Boy Scout?”

  “ ’Fraid not. But sometimes my intentions are honorable.”

  “Like now?”

  “No.” His deep-green eyes met hers. “Right now, my intentions are definitely not honorable.” And then he kissed her again. He kissed her until she was gripping him like she was drowning and he was her lifeline.

  “Oh! Um, excuse me…”

  They both turned to the young woman standing on the dock in a cute short skirt and cotton top, shielding her eyes from the glare of the sun with her hands, her long, sun-streaked, brown hair flowing out behind her. “Hi, sorry. I’m Mia Hutchinson.”

  One of the Seattle high school students that had called about the ad and had an interview with Tara this morning. “Mia, hi!” Knees still knocking, Tara stood up. It was too much to hope that her little make-out session with Ford hadn’t been seen, but her plan was to ignore it. Denial, meet your queen. “You’re right on time.”

  Ford was on his feet as well. “I thought we set that up for this afternoon,” he said to the girl.

  Tara looked at him. “No, she’s interviewing with me for a position at the inn.”

  “Actually,” Ford said. “She called to interview me for an article she’s writing on sailing.”

  “Um, yeah,” Mia said with a little wince. “Actually, I contacted both of you. I brought my résumé.” She pulled an envelope from her purse. “I didn’t really have any previous work experience that applied, so I just used the résumé I made up in economics class last semester. And before you ask, no, I didn’t really work for Facebook or Bill Gates. And I wasn’t a personal assistant to the Mariners’ manager either.” She hesitated, looking younger than seventeen. “The references are real, though.” She turned to Ford, apology in her gaze. “I need a job, but I made up the article thing.”

  “Why?” Ford asked.

  “Because I wanted to meet you both in a setting where you wouldn’t get all weirded out. Finding you both here was just luck, I guess.”

  Tara was very still, in direct opposition to the way her heart was threatening to burst right out of her chest. “You know us?”

  Again, Mia dragged her teeth over her bottom lip, looking at them from mossy green eyes that exactly matched…

  Ford’s.

  “I kinda know you,” Mia said. “It’s sort of a long story.”

  “The CliffsNotes version, then,” Ford suggested mildly.

  Good. Good, Tara thought. He was calm, cool, and collected. Normally that was her role, but she’d left calm a few minutes back and was quickly heading straight past cool and collected, directly to Freaking Out. Because looking at Mia was reminding her of a very young Ford.

  If he’d been female.

  With Tara’s willowy build.

  “I was actually really surprised to find you two… kissing,” Mia said carefully. “I don’t know what I expected, but it wasn’t that.”

  “Why don’t you enlighten us on what you did expect?” Ford said. “Or should I help you out with that?”

  Mia cocked her head, her gaze as sharp as his. “You figured it out,” she said, sounding relieved.

  “Yes,” he said.

  Tara couldn’t speak. Hell, she could hardly breathe. She reached out blindly for purchase and found Ford’s hand.

  “You’re ours,” Ford said quietly to the girl. “You’re our baby.”

  Chapter 11

  “Always tell the truth. It eliminates the

  need to remember anything.”

  TARA DANIELS

  Up until that moment, Ford’s plans for the day had included talking Tara into going out for a sail. And then burning off some excess energy.

  With their naked bodies.

  Yeah, that would have been right at the very top of the to-do list.

  But that all changed with Mia looking at him through his own green gaze, her expression slightly challenging and yet braced for… hurt and rejection, he realized as something twisted hard in his chest.

  How many years had he wondered about the baby that he and Tara had given up at birth?

  Seventeen.

  And how many years had he wondered if that baby would grow up happy and whole and smart and sharp and then… someday show up on his doorstep.

  Christ, he couldn’t remember ever feeling nerves like this before. Not while facing forty-foot waves threatening to tear his boat apart. Not while standing on an Olympic podium accepting a medal in the name of his country. Not ever.

  Tara hadn’t taken her eyes off Mia, and she was looking nervous too, her eyes misty. “You’re so beautiful,” she whispered.

  Mia’s eyes cut to her, quiet and assessing. “I look like you.”

  “Not as much as you look like…”

  They both turned to Ford.

  Having the woman he’d once loved with painful desperation, along with the daughter he’d dreamed about, both looking at him with varying degrees of emotion, was a punch in the solar plexus. Ford found he could scarcely breathe.

  “Can I hug you?” Tara asked their daughter.

  Mia gave a halting nod, but it was too late; they’d all seen the hesitation. Awkwardness settled over them all as Mia moved into Tara for a quick embrace. Ford was next, and he was surprised that with him Mia didn’t seem awkward at all. Anxious, even eager, but not reluctant, and as he wrapped his arms around this thin, beautiful teenager that was his—Christ, his—he closed his eyes and breathed her in. “How did you find us?”

  Mia pulled back and shifted her weight nervously, although her voice never wavered. “I thought I’d tell you after I got hired.”

  Bold. Ballsy. Probably she’d gotten a double whammy of both of those things from the gene pool, Ford thought.

  “I only have seven weeks,” Mia said, and Tara’s hand went to her chest as if to keep her heart from leaping out.

  Ford understood the panic. Hell, he felt it as his own. When Mia had been young, she’d had heart problems. A leaky valve that had required surgery. The only reason either Ford or Tara knew about it was because Tara’s mother had donated a very large chunk of money to the medical bills, taking a second mortgage on the inn to get it—something that had only been discovered after Phoebe had died.

  “What’s the matter?” Tara asked Mia, voice thick with worry. “Your heart again?”

  “No. I’m doin