Winter Wonderland Wishes. Abigail Gordon

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Winter Wonderland Wishes - Abigail Gordon Mills & Boon By Request

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think we can head back to the restaurant, if you’re ready,’ he told her as they stepped from a bric-a-brac shop where Phoebe had been admiring the vintage hand-embroidered tablecloths and runners. ‘The sauerkraut is probably primed to go.’

      Phoebe laughed and followed his lead to the casual eatery, where the maître d’ showed them to a table outside and provided them with menus. There were lights strung up high across the alfresco dining area, and their small table had a lovely street view. She felt more relaxed the more she thought of Heath as a colleague. A very handsome colleague, who bedded other women but would never bed her.

      ‘I love that all the speciality dishes are served with creamy mustard potato bake, sauerkraut, red wine sauce and German mustard. It seems so authentic. Hahndorf really is Adelaide’s little Germany,’ Phoebe said as she looked over the menu.

      Heath ordered a crisp white wine and some iced water while Phoebe tried to focus on the menu. It all looked wonderful, and there was a varied selection within the list of traditional German fare. Her mouth twisted a little from side to side as she carefully considered her options. Her finger softly tapped her bottom lip as she weighed up her decision.

      Heath fell a little further under the spell she didn’t know she was casting—one he was finding it almost futile to ignore.

      ‘I think …’ She paused to reread, and then continued. ‘I think I would like the smoked Kassler chops, please.’

      ‘Sounds great. I’ll go with the Schweinshaxe—crispy skin pork hock is a favourite of mine.’

      With that he signalled the waiter and placed their order. The waiter returned moments later with the drinks, before leaving them alone again.

      Phoebe was staring at the people walking by and at the cars slowly moving down the single-lane road that meandered through the town. She was thinking about Washington, covered in snow, while she was enjoying a balmy evening in the foothills on the other side of the world.

      ‘A penny for your thoughts?’

      ‘It will cost you a quarter.’

      ‘A quarter of what?’

      ‘A quarter of a dollar.’

      Heath rubbed the cleft in his chin and considered her terms. ‘Tell me honestly—are your thoughts right now worth twenty-five cents?’

      ‘I guess unless you pay up you’ll never know,’ Phoebe returned with a cheeky smile.

      Heath decided to call her bluff and, reaching for his wallet, found a twenty-cent and a five-cent coin. He placed both on the table and pushed them towards her with lean strong fingers. ‘Well, your thoughts are officially mine now.’

      ‘I was thinking about Washington …’

      ‘International thoughts are always more expensive, so I can see why there was a price-hike from a penny to twenty-five cents,’ he teased. ‘So go on.’

      Phoebe bit the inside of her lip. ‘That’s it.’

       ‘That’s it?’

      ‘Yep. I’m afraid you probably didn’t get your money’s worth after all,’ Phoebe said with her head at a tilt. ‘It was always going to be a gamble. When the stakes are high and you play big … sometimes you lose.’

      Heath’s lips curved a little at her response. He suddenly had the feeling that spending time with Phoebe would never be a loss.

      ‘That was delicious—thank you so much.’

      ‘You’re most welcome,’ he replied as they made their way along the now darkened street.

      Street lamps lit their way, but the sky was dark and dotted with sparkling stars. The breeze had picked up a little over the almost two hours they had spent eating and conversing, but it was refreshing, not cold, and it carried along with it the gentle wafts of eucalyptus and other native bushes.

      Phoebe filled her lungs with the beautiful fresh air. Both had purposely steered the conversation away from their personal lives and discussed issues aligned to their careers.

      ‘We can head to my father’s home, if you like, to have a coffee with him.’ Heath wanted to prolong his time with Phoebe, but in a way that was safe for both of them.

      ‘Isn’t it a bit late to be calling on your father?’ she asked as they left the freeway and headed towards the city residence.

      ‘My father is a night owl. He has been for many years. He was always the last to bed. I remember coming home in the early hours of the morning sometimes, maybe from a pub crawl with uni friends, and he would still be up reading.’

      ‘And your mother didn’t mind?’

      Heath drew a shallow breath. Although it had been a long time since his mother had died he still felt the loss.

      ‘My mother was killed in a light plane crash returning from Kangaroo Island. She was a social worker and had been over there consulting about issues with the high rate of school truancy. She was working on strategies to keep the children on the island engaged, and she called my father just before she boarded, very excited with the outcome. She told him that they had made significant progress and that she would tell him all about it when she arrived home. The plane went down ten minutes after take-off from Kingscote, in bad weather that had come in quickly.’

      ‘I’m so sorry to hear that.’ Phoebe’s hand instinctively covered her mouth for a moment. She felt her heart sink with the news he had just broken. That meant he had lost two women he had loved. That was a heavy burden to carry for any man.

      ‘How old were you at the time, Heath?’

      ‘Sixteen—so it will be twenty years this July since she was killed.’

      The desolate expression on Phoebe’s face told Heath how she was feeling. She knew she had no words that could capture the depth of his sadness so she didn’t try to speak.

      ‘I think, to be honest, he has no reason to go to bed early any more. There’s no one waiting so he stays up late—unless he has an early surgery roster … then he goes to bed at a reasonable hour.’

      ‘And he’s never wanted to remarry?’

      ‘No. He and my mother were soul mates. He didn’t think he would find that again, so he never looked.’

      ‘That’s sad. There might have been someone just perfect …’ Phoebe replied—then realised that she was overstepping the mark, by commenting about someone else’s love-life when her own had been a disaster, and stopped.

      ‘Perhaps. But he’s never recovered from losing my mother. Some people never do. They just can’t move on.’

      Phoebe wondered if Heath was the same as his father. Cut from the same cloth and faithful to the woman he had lost. Never having healed enough to be with someone else.

      They travelled along in silence after that, until Heath pulled up at the front of the beautiful old sandstone villa that his father had called home for so many years, and where he was staying for just a few weeks. Standard white roses, eight bushes

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