One Night Read online




  ONE NIGHT

  Debbie Macomber

  To Chris Beckham and his staff

  for simplifying my life

  and holding off the IRS.

  You haven’t got a prayer of

  confiscating my QVC card.

  Contents

  1 “You’re fired,” Clyde Tarkington announced.

  2 Kyle had mapped out the route he planned to take…

  3 “Kyle.” The name came out of Carrie’s throat more like…

  4 Kyle paced the confines of his jail cell until he…

  5 “We’re asking that you contact the Secret Service if you…

  6 “I swear if you breathe a word of this to…

  7 “Why don’t we ask someone for directions?” Carrie suggested.

  8 Kyle was furious. He’d made an ass of himself over…

  9 “What do you mean she disappeared?” Clyde Tarkington bellowed.

  10 Carrie was trying to rest, but that was impossible. The…

  11 “Where?” Kyle searched the crowd, but he didn’t see anyone…

  12 Across the street from Harris’s house, Sanders hid behind the…

  13 “Carrie, is that you?”

  14 “That would be me,” Kyle said, stepping forward without the…

  15 The phone was ringing when Kyle walked into the house…

  16 “But it just says they sell fishing and hunting licenses…

  17 Kyle needed to think, and he was having a hard…

  18 Kyle immediately placed himself between Sanders and the two women.

  19 “Sit down, ladies,” Nelson instructed, motioning with the gun toward…

  Epilogue

  “There’s a letter from your mom and dad,” Carrie said. Kyle…

  Acknowledgments

  Praise

  About the Author

  By Debbie Macomber

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  “You’re fired,” Clyde Tarkington announced.

  Carrie Jamison looked up at the station manager for KUTE radio and blinked back her shock. She opened her mouth, but words refused to come. “I don’t understand,” she managed finally.

  “Which word?” Clyde asked, shuffling his fat cigar to the other side of his mouth. “You are canned, out of a job, unemployed, terminated.”

  “But…” It took her a few more moments to collect herself. “Who’ll take over the morning program?”

  Clyde chewed on the end of the fat cigar. “I haven’t decided that yet.”

  Carrie noticed he didn’t seem overly concerned about finding a replacement. She focused her attention on the scarred wood desk and resisted the urge to argue, to list her accomplishments, the success of her ideas.

  “May I ask why?” She already knew the answer: Kyle Harris. The newscaster had been a thorn in her side from the first. But it wasn’t all her fault. Kyle didn’t like her either.

  “You can’t seem to get along with Kyle.”

  Naturally the good-ol’-boy network would fire her instead of the man. Carrie was surprised at Clyde. She’d always thought of him as fair. Now she knew otherwise; men stick together.

  “We rub each other the wrong way,” was all Carrie was willing to say.

  “It’s gotten much worse lately,” Clyde said.

  Carrie agreed. The tension between her and Kyle Harris had grown so thick in the last few weeks it could have been sliced, toasted, and served with coffee. It had came to a head when she tricked him into shaving off his beard. He’d never forgiven her, and to be fair, her tactics had been slightly underhanded. But she never would have believed she’d lose her job over it.

  Clyde sat down, crossed his stubby legs, and seemed to wait for her response.

  Carrie was fond of Clyde. He was the fatherly type, with a receding hairline, deep blue eyes, and a head and a heart for radio that she’d long respected. He was her boss and her friend—or so she’d once believed.

  “How long do I have?” she asked, in a weak, almost unintelligible voice. “Two weeks?”

  “That sounds fair,” Clyde said.

  He took the cigar out of his mouth and stared at the end of it. As long as Carrie could remember, she’d never seen him light one.

  “Unless…” He paused, and his gaze met hers with the force of something physical.

  “Unless what?” Carrie asked, eager now. She scooted to the edge of her seat, hoping, praying he would offer her a reprieve.

  “Never mind,” he said, shaking his head. “It’d never work.”

  “What?”

  “I was thinking you two might come to some sort of agreement. But”—he released an exaggerated sigh—“you’ve worked together for nearly a year and haven’t been able to get along in all that time. Nothing’s likely to change now.”

  “We started off on the wrong foot,” Carrie said, remembering when they’d met. One glance had told her they were headed for trouble. Her morning show consisted of bells and whistles, jokes and pranks. The newscaster was a stuffed shirt; to him the news was a somber business. Carrie had suspected Kyle Harris wouldn’t be amused by her brand of comedy. And she was right.

  From the first day, Carrie felt Kyle’s mild contempt. It might have been her imagination, but she doubted it. He thought of her as silly and artificial, and she viewed him as a curmudgeon. The fact that he shared the same political views as her father hadn’t endeared him to her either.

  “Is this all because of Kyle’s beard?”

  A shadow of a smile quivered at the edges of Clyde’s mouth, but he suppressed it. “In part,” he said. No amusement leaked into his voice.

  “It was all in fun.”

  Carrie wanted to shake herself for the things she’d said. She hadn’t meant to insult Kyle by suggesting he had a face made for radio. It was a joke. She should have known better.

  “The ratings for my show doubled that week,” she reminded him.

  “Are you suggesting we give you an award?” Clyde’s voice rose half an octave in irritation.

  “He hasn’t grown it back,” Carrie said, wanting to make light of the event. She found Kyle’s clean-shaven face to be surprisingly appealing. Her perception of him had changed. Without the beard, his jaw was lean and strongly defined, giving him a distinctly rugged appeal she would never have guessed was there. She hated to admit how curious she’d been to discover the man behind the mask.

  Clyde couldn’t seem to decide if he wanted to stand or sit. He got out of his chair as if he were suddenly uncomfortable, walked over to the window that overlooked downtown Kansas City, and gripped his hands behind his back.

  “Have my ratings gone down?” she asked nervously.

  “No,” Clyde admitted. “Don’t misunderstand me, Carrie, you’ve done a good job. That’s not the problem. The reason I’m terminating you is because of what’s going on between you and Kyle. The rest of us aren’t blind. We all work together, and we can’t be one big happy family with the two of you constantly at each other’s throat.”

  “I’m not the only one to blame,” she said, to defend herself. It wasn’t as if she’d started a one-woman war against Kyle Harris. He’d tossed out his own fair share of innuendoes and insults.

  “It’s become an issue with the staff,” Clyde said. “In the beginning it was like a game; everyone got a kick out of the way you taunted each other. It isn’t amusing anymore. What started out as fun has become destructive to the entire station.”

  She had no defense. “But—”

  “I don’t have any choice,” Clyde said, cutting her off. He shifted his feet as if struggling to find a comfortable stance. “I did what was necessary. I canned you both.”

  “You fired both of us?” Carrie bolted out of th
e chair before she could stop herself.

  “Don’t misunderstand me,” Clyde said, fixing his steady gaze on her. “This isn’t something I wanted to do, but it’d be impossible to keep one of you and let the other go. Not unless I wanted a mutiny.”

  Carrie appreciated his predicament; she just didn’t happen to like it. “But you’re willing to reconsider if Kyle and I can reach some sort of agreement?” she asked, sinking back into the hard wooden chair. It would be easier to negotiate peace talks in the Middle East, but she’d try anything in order to keep her position at the station. This job meant the world to her.

  “I don’t expect you to be bosom buddies,” Clyde said. “Getting along shouldn’t be that difficult. If you didn’t work so hard at disliking each other, you might discover you have several things in common.”

  “I doubt that.” Frankly, Carrie couldn’t see how it would be possible for them to agree about anything. She was twenty-seven, with limited radio experience. Finding another plum morning position, especially in the Kansas City metropolitan area, would be difficult. All right, it would be next to impossible.

  “May I go now?” Carrie asked weakly. She stood, her shoulders slumped forward with the weight of her troubles.

  “I’ve already spoken to Kyle,” Clyde said as she moved toward the door.

  “What did he say?”

  Clyde rubbed his hand along the back of his neck. “His reaction was about the same as yours. He was shocked.”

  “I see.”

  “He wants to talk to you, OK?”

  She blinked at him from the doorway. “What choice do I have?”

  Clyde set his cigar in a crystal ashtray. “None. Really, it’s a damn shame you can’t get along,” he muttered. “You’re both hard-working, decent people.”

  Carrie hadn’t gone more than ten feet down the long, narrow hallway that led to her tiny office when she came face to face with Kyle Harris. Neither spoke for several long moments.

  Carrie tried to think of something witty, but her brain had deserted her. For someone known for her quick repartee, this was serious.

  She looked up at Kyle, who towered a full eight inches above her, and tried to view him from a fresh perspective. His shoulders were broad and tapered down to lean hips and a flat stomach. From the office scuttlebutt she understood he kept trim with regular exercise. He often participated in ten-K fun runs, sometimes to benefit charity.

  Carrie hated exercise. If ever she was tempted to join an aerobics class, she would lie down and take a nap until the notion passed.

  Kyle’s dark, intense eyes were studying her as thoroughly as she was him.

  Carrie couldn’t help wondering what he saw. She was small, a paltry five feet four inches tall, and slender, although she never understood why since her appetite was monstrous and she was often hungry as a bear. She wore her long dark hair piled on top of her head, because she felt she needed the height. Unfortunately, more often than not, her tottering hairdo resembled Bart Simpson’s mother’s.

  No one was likely to suggest she model swimsuits for Sports Illustrated. When it came right down to it, her best features were her breasts, not that she’d been really generously endowed. They were normal size when everything else about her came in miniature.

  “I take it Clyde’s talked to you?” Kyle asked.

  “Yes.”

  “Do you have any plans for the rest of the day?” he asked.

  “Not really. What about you?”

  “I have some free time.”

  She was about to say they would soon have nothing but free time unless they could come up with a plan to convince Clyde they were about to change their ways.

  “Could we meet for lunch?”

  “That sounds like a good idea.” Were they capable of spending time together without trading insults?

  “You think we can manage to get along that long?” he asked. Apparently he had the same doubts.

  “I don’t know,” she said with a half smile, “but I’m willing to try if you are.”

  They set a time and place, which took another five minutes. He suggested a restaurant with linen tablecloths and waiters in starched uniforms. Carrie preferred a well-known and beloved barbecue place with blue-painted picnic tables that sat outside around an open pit, but she decided against pushing it. Someone as fastidious as Kyle Harris wouldn’t enjoy getting barbecue sauce under his fingernails.

  Instead they compromised on a generic place not far from the radio station.

  Carrie arrived first, fifteen minutes early, choosing to sit out on the sun-dappled patio under the shade of an umbrella. A breeze cooled the summer afternoon. She drank iced tea and waited. It went without saying that Kyle would be on time.

  The afternoon was lovely, filled with bright sunshine. Thin wisps of clouds scooted across an expanse of bold blue sky. Carrie had moved to Kansas from Texas a year earlier and had come to love her adopted state. Kansas was like a rainbow with its wide spectrum of colors. Much of the state was filled with woods, rolling green hills, and amber meadows. The land was crisscrossed by clear streams and rushing rivers. Although she wasn’t much for sports fishing, she’d heard that Kansas yielded some of the best in the United States. Kyle fished. At least she’d overheard him bragging about a recent trip. She might have misunderstood, but it seemed he had the use of a cabin on some lake that he liked to escape to on weekends. She pushed that information to the back of her mind, because it didn’t fit her image of him. She couldn’t imagine Kyle relaxing. She couldn’t ever imagine Kyle without his three-button vest and silk tie.

  Carrie’s family hadn’t been keen on her leaving Texas, but the farther away she was from her headstrong father the better. Carrie was certain she was a disappointment to Michael Jamison. He’d wanted her to major in education rather than communications. The two hadn’t seen eye to eye since Carrie turned thirteen. If the truth be known, she saw a good deal of her father in Kyle. Michael Jamison was a pillar of the community, a deacon of the church, and as opinionated as they came.

  Kyle arrived and squinted into the sun as he pulled out a padded chair and sat across the table from her.

  “I don’t suppose I could talk you into dining inside?” he asked, shading his eyes with his hand.

  “Didn’t you bring sunglasses?” she asked impatiently.

  “Obviously not.”

  Already they had started, and he’d barely sat down. This didn’t bode well. “Let’s trade places,” she said, willing to swallow her pride.

  “Never mind,” he muttered, squinting at her while he removed the napkin from the white enamel tabletop. “Forget I said anything.”

  Carrie stood. “Please,” she said. “I’d be happy to swap seats with you.”

  They did this graciously, and once she was settled again she looked over at him and smiled. He returned the smile. Maybe they could work matters out with a little effort.

  “There, now,” he said, smoothing the napkin across his lap. “That wasn’t so difficult, was it?”

  “Not in the least,” she admitted, looking at the top of the menu. It was going to be difficult to choose what she wanted for lunch. She was in the mood for a Cobb salad, but the French dip sandwich sounded good too.

  It took Kyle all of three seconds to decide on roast beef with mustard and tomato. The waitress came for their order and Kyle asked that it be put on one check. “I’ll buy,” he said.

  If he was treating, Carrie decided to order lobster, but she didn’t find any on the menu.

  “Carrie?” Kyle said, looking toward the waitress, who was waiting, pen and pad in hand, for her to decide.

  “I’ll have the Cobb salad.” She wasn’t keen on the way he’d rushed her. Under normal circumstances she wouldn’t have let him intimidate her into making a snap decision, but in the interests of goodwill she let it pass.

  “All right,” Carrie said, relaxing against the back of the chair. “Clyde has fired us both.”

  “But I believe he’ll h
ire us back if we’re willing to put our differences aside and start over.”

  “That was the message I got too,” Carrie said. “It shouldn’t be that difficult, should it?” She was optimistic they could find a common ground, if for no other reason than in order to remain employed.

  “I agree. This may be a first for us.”

  They both punctuated his statement with a smile.

  “I’m willing to call a cease-fire if you are,” Kyle said next.

  Carrie nodded. So far so good.

  “Maybe we should start by getting to know each other a little better. I don’t know what I did right off that set you—”

  “You didn’t do anything,” Carrie interrupted. She reached for her iced tea. “It was—oh, I don’t know, the way you first met everyone in that three-piece suit like you were some big dignitary.”

  “At least I choose to dress as a professional,” he snapped.

  They both paused as if simultaneously recognizing they’d stumbled upon dangerously thin ice.

  “I believe we’ve established that our first impressions of each other were negative,” she offered after a stilted moment.

  The tops of Kyle’s ears had turned bright pink. She’d seen it happen before, so she knew he was struggling not to show how much she irritated him.

  “Perhaps you could tell me what it is about me that troubles you so much.” Even as she spoke, Carrie was aware that she was placing her neck on the chopping block. It was a generous gesture aimed at proving her sincerity in working through their animosity.

  “You’re a damn good deejay.” Kyle sounded a bit hesitant. “Your wit is quick, and you have a way of making even the most mundane things interesting. The segment ‘The News That Shouldn’t Have Made the News’ is very clever.”

 

    A Walk Along the Beach Read onlineA Walk Along the BeachA Christmas Message Read onlineA Christmas MessageFirst Comes Love Read onlineFirst Comes LoveThe Marriage Risk Read onlineThe Marriage RiskWhat Makes a Family Read onlineWhat Makes a FamilyA Country Christmas Read onlineA Country ChristmasWindow on the Bay Read onlineWindow on the BayMorning Comes Softly Read onlineMorning Comes SoftlyThe Twenty-First Wish Read onlineThe Twenty-First WishAngels at Christmas Read onlineAngels at ChristmasMy Funny Valentine (Debbie Macomber Classics) Read onlineMy Funny Valentine (Debbie Macomber Classics)Almost Paradise Read onlineAlmost ParadiseSummer on Blossom Street Read onlineSummer on Blossom StreetCountry Brides Read onlineCountry BridesSusannah's Garden Read onlineSusannah's GardenHome for the Holidays Read onlineHome for the HolidaysTogether for Christmas Read onlineTogether for ChristmasCedar Cove 01 - 16 Lighthouse Road Read onlineCedar Cove 01 - 16 Lighthouse RoadBe My Valentine Read onlineBe My ValentineNavy Families Read onlineNavy FamiliesThe Apartment Read onlineThe ApartmentChristmas Wishes Read onlineChristmas WishesDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series8 Sandpiper Way Read online8 Sandpiper WayBlossom Street Brides Read onlineBlossom Street BridesChristmas Letters Read onlineChristmas LettersDashing Through the Snow Read onlineDashing Through the SnowFairy Tale Weddings Read onlineFairy Tale WeddingsBetween Friends Read onlineBetween FriendsThere's Something About Christmas Read onlineThere's Something About ChristmasMontana Read onlineMontanaA Gift to Last Read onlineA Gift to LastLost and Found in Cedar Cove (Short Story) Read onlineLost and Found in Cedar Cove (Short Story)Farmer Takes a Wife Read onlineFarmer Takes a WifeThursdays At Eight Read onlineThursdays At EightYours and Mine Read onlineYours and MineStand-In Wife Read onlineStand-In WifeDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series, Volume 2 Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series, Volume 2311 Pelican Court Read online311 Pelican CourtA Girl's Guide to Moving On Read onlineA Girl's Guide to Moving OnA Turn in the Road Read onlineA Turn in the RoadOne Night Read onlineOne NightThe Manning Grooms Read onlineThe Manning GroomsLooking for a Hero Read onlineLooking for a HeroThis Matter of Marriage Read onlineThis Matter of MarriageAlaskan Holiday Read onlineAlaskan HolidaySame Time, Next Year Read onlineSame Time, Next YearAlways Dakota Read onlineAlways DakotaDenim and Diamonds Read onlineDenim and DiamondsBride Wanted Read onlineBride WantedCall Me Mrs. Miracle Read onlineCall Me Mrs. MiracleStarlight Read onlineStarlightWhen First They Met Read onlineWhen First They MetNavy Husband Read onlineNavy HusbandStarry Night Read onlineStarry NightTwelve Days of Christmas Read onlineTwelve Days of ChristmasCottage by the Sea Read onlineCottage by the SeaReflections of Yesterday Read onlineReflections of YesterdayReady for Marriage Read onlineReady for MarriageThe Wyoming Kid Read onlineThe Wyoming KidRock-A-Bye Baby Read onlineRock-A-Bye BabyStarting Now Read onlineStarting NowWhite Lace and Promises Read onlineWhite Lace and PromisesThe Perfect Christmas Read onlineThe Perfect Christmas50 Harbor Street Read online50 Harbor StreetAngels at the Table Read onlineAngels at the TableAny Dream Will Do Read onlineAny Dream Will DoMr. Miracle Read onlineMr. MiracleTwenty Wishes Read onlineTwenty WishesMail-Order Bride Read onlineMail-Order BrideDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series, Volume 3 Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series, Volume 3Midnight Sons Volume 1 Read onlineMidnight Sons Volume 1Country Bride Read onlineCountry BrideThe Trouble with Caasi Read onlineThe Trouble with CaasiA Mother's Wish Read onlineA Mother's WishRight Next Door Read onlineRight Next DoorReturn to Promise Read onlineReturn to PromiseHeart of Texas Vol. 3 Read onlineHeart of Texas Vol. 3Friends--And Then Some Read onlineFriends--And Then SomeWyoming Brides Read onlineWyoming BridesReady for Romance Read onlineReady for RomanceA Season of Angels Read onlineA Season of AngelsLove by Degree Read onlineLove by DegreeBaby Blessed Read onlineBaby BlessedAngels Everywhere Read onlineAngels Everywhere204 Rosewood Lane Read online204 Rosewood LaneDakota Home Read onlineDakota HomeHasty Wedding Read onlineHasty Wedding1105 Yakima Street Read online1105 Yakima StreetThe Manning Sisters Read onlineThe Manning SistersMrs. Miracle Read onlineMrs. MiracleThe Shop on Blossom Street Read onlineThe Shop on Blossom StreetShirley, Goodness and Mercy Read onlineShirley, Goodness and MercyFalling for Her (Short Story) (Kindle Single) Read onlineFalling for Her (Short Story) (Kindle Single)Angels at the Table: A Shirley, Goodness, and Mercy Christmas Story Read onlineAngels at the Table: A Shirley, Goodness, and Mercy Christmas StoryThat Wintry Feeling (Debbie Macomber Classics) Read onlineThat Wintry Feeling (Debbie Macomber Classics)Heart of Texas Vol. 2 Read onlineHeart of Texas Vol. 2Orchard Valley Grooms Read onlineOrchard Valley GroomsBuffalo Valley Read onlineBuffalo ValleyAll Things Considered Read onlineAll Things ConsideredMidnight Sons Volume 3 Read onlineMidnight Sons Volume 344 Cranberry Point Read online44 Cranberry PointSome Kind of Wonderful Read onlineSome Kind of WonderfulLove Letters: A Rose Harbor Novel Read onlineLove Letters: A Rose Harbor NovelMarriage of Inconvenience Read onlineMarriage of InconvenienceTouched By Angels Read onlineTouched By AngelsHeart of Texas Series Volume 1: Lonesome CowboyTexas Two-StepCaroline's Child Read onlineHeart of Texas Series Volume 1: Lonesome CowboyTexas Two-StepCaroline's ChildThe Man You'll Marry Read onlineThe Man You'll MarryJingle All the Way Read onlineJingle All the WayMarried in Seattle Read onlineMarried in SeattleA Cedar Cove Christmas Read onlineA Cedar Cove ChristmasMerry and Bright Read onlineMerry and BrightIf Not for You Read onlineIf Not for YouStarry Night: A Christmas Novel Read onlineStarry Night: A Christmas NovelOn a Snowy Night: The Christmas BasketThe Snow Bride Read onlineOn a Snowy Night: The Christmas BasketThe Snow BrideSweet Tomorrows Read onlineSweet TomorrowsThree Brides, No Groom Read onlineThree Brides, No GroomBrides and Grooms Box Set: Marriage WantedBride WantedGroom Wanted Read onlineBrides and Grooms Box Set: Marriage WantedBride WantedGroom WantedA Good Yarn Read onlineA Good YarnThe Inn at Rose Harbor Read onlineThe Inn at Rose HarborThe Knitting Diaries Read onlineThe Knitting DiariesChanging Habits Read onlineChanging HabitsHeart of Texas Volume One Read onlineHeart of Texas Volume OneHearts Divided Read onlineHearts DividedTrading Christmas Read onlineTrading ChristmasBorrowed Dreams (Debbie Macomber Classics) Read onlineBorrowed Dreams (Debbie Macomber Classics)Back on Blossom Street Read onlineBack on Blossom StreetHeartsong Read onlineHeartsongAlaska Home Read onlineAlaska Home16 Lighthouse Road Read online16 Lighthouse RoadFamily Affair Read onlineFamily AffairMidnight Sons Volume 2 Read onlineMidnight Sons Volume 2Debbie Macomber's Navy Box Set Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Navy Box SetThe First Man You Meet Read onlineThe First Man You MeetCindy and the Prince Read onlineCindy and the PrinceJust Married Read onlineJust MarriedThe Bachelor Prince Read onlineThe Bachelor PrinceDebbie Macomber's Navy Box Set: Navy WifeNavy BluesNavy BratNavy WomanNavy BabyNavy Husband Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Navy Box Set: Navy WifeNavy BluesNavy BratNavy WomanNavy BabyNavy HusbandDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Cookbook Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove CookbookSomeday Soon Read onlineSomeday SoonChristmas in Cedar Cove Read onlineChristmas in Cedar CoveSooner or Later Read onlineSooner or LaterSilver Linings Read onlineSilver Linings1022 Evergreen Place Read online1022 Evergreen PlaceBorn in a Small Town Read onlineBorn in a Small TownOnce Upon a Time: Discovering Our Forever After Story Read onlineOnce Upon a Time: Discovering Our Forever After StoryDebbie Macomber's Table: Sharing the Joy of Cooking With Family and Friends Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Table: Sharing the Joy of Cooking With Family and FriendsHannah's List Read onlineHannah's List92 Pacific Boulevard Read online92 Pacific BoulevardGlad Tidings: There's Something About ChristmasHere Comes Trouble Read onlineGlad Tidings: There's Something About ChristmasHere Comes TroubleThe Manning Brides Read onlineThe Manning BridesPromise, Texas Read onlinePromise, TexasThe Rain Sparrow Read onlineThe Rain SparrowAn Engagement in Seattle Read onlineAn Engagement in Seattle1225 Christmas Tree Lane Read online1225 Christmas Tree LaneLast One Home Read onlineLast One HomeRose Harbor in Bloom Read onlineRose Harbor in BloomWhen Christmas Comes Read onlineWhen Christmas ComesPromise Me Forever (Debbie Macomber Classics) Read onlinePromise Me Forever (Debbie Macomber Classics)I'll Be Home for Christmas Read onlineI'll Be Home for ChristmasGlad Tidings Read onlineGlad Tidings6 Rainier Drive Read online6 Rainier DriveOrchard Valley Brides Read onlineOrchard Valley BridesTogether for Christmas: 5-B Poppy LaneWhen We TouchWelcome to Icicle FallsStarstruck Read onlineTogether for Christmas: 5-B Poppy LaneWhen We TouchWelcome to Icicle FallsStarstruckThat Holiday Feeling: Silver BellsThe Perfect HolidayUnder the Christmas Tree Read onlineThat Holiday Feeling: Silver BellsThe Perfect HolidayUnder the Christmas TreeThe Sooner the Better Read onlineThe Sooner the Better