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One Christmas Eve
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Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Thank you
ONE CHRISTMAS EVE
Robin Patchen
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
ONE CHRISTMAS EVE
COPYRIGHT 2012 by ROBIN PATCHEN
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Pelican Ventures, LLC except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
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Contact Information: [email protected]
All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version(R), NIV(R), Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com
Cover Art by Nicola Martinez
Harbourlight Books, a division of Pelican Ventures, LLC
www.pelicanbookgroup.com PO Box 1738 *Aztec, NM * 87410
Harbourlight Books sail and mast logo is a trademark of Pelican Ventures, LLC
Publishing History
First Harbourlight Edition, 2012
Electronic Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-240-0
Published in the United States of America
Dedication
To Eddie, the love of my life. Your support means everything to me.
1
Would his son ever forgive him?
The question nagged at Blake Carmichael as he climbed the stairs to bed. If the evening they’d just spent together was any indication, the answer was a resounding no.
They’d decorated the Christmas tree, and Eli hadn’t said ten words the entire time. He was only staying until his mom, Blake’s ex-wife, returned from her honeymoon.
Blake had two weeks to convince his teenage son to trust him again. From the upstairs landing, he glanced at the twinkling lights on the Christmas tree below, and sighed. He better not blow this chance.
He walked, not towards his own room, but to Eli’s. The few times his son had stayed overnight, Blake had sneaked into his room to pray by his bedside. If Eli woke up and found him there, he’d be furious, but Blake couldn’t resist looking at his son’s face void of the scowl normally looking back.
He listened outside Eli’s closed door. Aside from the gentle hum of the heater and the distant sound of the surf crashing against the rocky New Hampshire shore, he heard nothing. He cracked the door. In the moon’s glow seeping through the window, Blake saw Eli’s things scattered on the floor—the jeans he’d worn that day, his suitcase with a couple of T-shirts hanging out, and his school backpack.
Beyond the clutter, the queen-sized bed was covered in a messy disarray of blankets, beneath which lay his teenage son.
Blake tiptoed to the bed, sidestepping the clutter. Not even a tuft of his son’s dirty blonde hair stuck out from beneath the comforter. He walked around the bed to see if his son’s face was showing from the other side, but again, all he saw was the blanket. He gently lifted the comforter, but instead of his son’s gangly limbs and messy hair, he saw the plump edge of a pillow.
His heart raced.
He tugged the comforter back another few inches. Pillows and blankets. He pulled the sheets back. More pillows. Heart pounding, he yanked the covers off the bed entirely.
Three pillows were lined end-to-end on the otherwise empty bed.
Eli was gone.
Blake turned on the bedside lamp. “Eli?”
No answer.
He opened the bathroom door and flipped on the light. Empty.
“Eli?” he called again.
Blake stood in the center of his son’s room, shocked and muttering incoherent prayers. Then he bolted out of the room, down the stairs, and into his office. Disconnecting his cell phone from its charger, he dialed Eli’s number.
It went straight to voicemail.
Blake dropped the phone on the desk, resisting the urge to throw it against the wall. Instead, he opened his laptop, navigated to his email program, and scrolled down to his ex-wife Amber’s message from two days before.
Yes! Halfway down the page was the name and phone number of Eli’s best friend. He dialed.
“Hello?” said a groggy female voice.
“Mrs. Bishop?” Blake ran out of the study and up the stairs.
“Yes?”
“I’m sorry to be calling so late. This is Blake Carmichael, Eli’s father. I was wondering if you’ve seen him tonight.”
The woman cleared her throat. “Um … no. Why?” Her voice sounded concerned. She probably knew Eli better than Blake did. “Is he OK?”
“I don’t know.” Blake returned to his son’s room, scanned it, and sat down beside the backpack. “He sneaked out. I hoped maybe…is Hayden there?”
“Yes, hold on a second.”
Blake unzipped the backpack while he waited. Slowly he pulled out the contents. A three-ring binder, at least a dozen pencils, most with dull or broken tips, a handful of crumpled pages. An old math test—Eli got an A-minus. Two faded red erasers. While he searched the backpack, music filtered through the phone, louder by the second. Either Hayden slept with music blaring or he was still awake.
The music suddenly stopped.
“Here he is,” Mrs. Bishop said.
“Hello?”
“Hayden? This is Blake Carmichael, Eli’s father. He sneaked out tonight. Any idea where he might be?”
“Nope. Haven’t talked to him.”
“Listen, I know you don’t want to get him in trouble, but…well, he’s already in trouble. At this point, I just need to know he’s safe. I won’t even tell him I talked to you.”
“I told you,” Hayden said. “I don’t know where he is.”
“Do you have any suggestions for me, then? Ideas where I could look for him? People I could call?”
Hayden snorted. “It’s too bad you have to call me to find out about your own son, huh?”
Blake felt his temper roll in like the surf outside. He blew out a breath and prayed for patience. “Yes. It’s unforgiveable.” He let the words hang in space, hoping Hayden would take pity on him. Seconds ticked away while the silence expanded.
Finally he heard a deep sigh. “I really don’t know where he is, but you could call his girlfriend. The two of them seemed to be planning something at school yesterday.”
“Planning what?” Blake asked.
“No idea.”
He closed his eyes and recalled Amber’s email on his screen downstairs. It said nothing about a girlfriend. “Do you have a number for his girlfriend?”
“I don’t know her number, but her name’s Kelsey Waters.”
“She goes to your school?”
“Yeah.”
“OK. Thank you, Hayden. If you think of anything, or if you hear from him, can you call me?”
“Sure. Whatever.”
Blake left his number and hung up, knowing he wouldn’t be hearing from Hayden Bishop again, whether Eli called him, or not.
Kelsey Waters. Kelsey Waters. Why w
as the name familiar?
Then he remembered. He’d met Kelsey the previous spring, right after he’d started attending Seaview Bible Church. She was attending that Sunday with her aunt, Tallia Waters.
Tallia. Beautiful woman, at least ten years younger than he, with dark brown hair, milky white skin, and captivating green eyes that spoke of innocence and wisdom, all at the same time. He’d wanted to ask her out, but he refused to start any new relationships until he had mended fences with his son, a self-imposed punishment for all his bad behavior.
But if he was going to start dating again, Tallia would be on the top of his list.
He grabbed Eli’s backpack and ran down the stairs to his office again. The church directory would have Tallia’s phone number. He could get Kelsey’s phone number from her.
He dialed the phone. He was out of breath from the stairs, the fear, or maybe a combination of both. Heavy breathing. An excellent way to start a middle-of-the-night conversation with a beautiful woman.
“Hello?” Another sleepy voice.
He tried to relax his breathing. “Tallia? It’s Blake Carmichael, from Seaview.”
“Blake?” She cleared her throat. “What…why…?”
“I’m sorry to wake you, but I need your help.”
A pause while something rustled on the other end of the phone. “OK. What is it?”
“My son Eli is staying with me, and he sneaked out of the house. I called his best friend and he said that Eli is dating Kelsey Waters. That’s your niece, right?”
“Yeah. She told me they’ve been seeing each other for a couple of weeks.”
“Hayden said Eli and Kelsey were planning something for tonight and I wondered if you could give me her phone number, or her parents’ number.”
“No need. Kelsey’s staying with me this weekend. Hold on a sec, and I’ll go ask her if she knows where he is.”
“Thanks.”
Though Eli had turned sixteen and earned his driver’s license, he didn’t have a car, yet. Amber didn’t want him to have that much freedom, since he’d been flirting with trouble for a few years. He knew part of Amber’s reluctance was a fear that Eli might actually be grateful to his father for the gift.
Blake was pretty sure Amber would hate that.
However, Blake had decided a new car would be a great Christmas gift for Eli, now that he’d had his license for six months and had proven his competence and responsibility. The dealership was delivering the Mustang convertible the next day, Christmas Eve, to surprise Eli Christmas morning.
Was it too late to get his money back?
The backpack was almost empty and he hadn’t found anything helpful. He unzipped the last pocket and pulled out a flyer printed on bright red paper. “WinterFest Jam for the Homeless. Friday, December 23rd.”
Tonight.
“Blake?” Tallia’s voice was suddenly high-pitched.
“Yes?”
“She’s not here! She’s gone. There were pillows under her blankets, but she…she must’ve sneaked out!”
Blake read the flyer again. “OK. Well, at least we know they’re together. Does she have a car?”
“Yes.”
“She must’ve picked him up. Don’t worry, I’ll find them. I’ll call you—”
“I can’t believe it. I’m going to kill her when I find her. My brother will go nuts it if he finds out I lost her.”
“Tallia, you didn’t lose her. She sneaked out.”
A pause.
“Right. Good point. It’s not like she’s four and we’re at the mall. Where are you going to look?”
“I have a couple of ideas.”
“Can I come with you?”
Blake paused, pictured Tallia, and shook his head. He had to stay focused. “You sure you don’t want to stay there in case she comes home?”
“I can’t just sit here and wait. I’ll go crazy.”
He knew how she felt. “OK. What’s your address?”
Tallia rattled it off, and Blake wrote it on the back of the flyer. “Can you be ready in fifteen minutes?”
2
Tallia hung up the phone and tossed it on the bureau. Peeling off her nightgown, she grabbed the first pair of jeans she could find. She yanked open the miniscule closet and searched on the floor. A red t-shirt and her navy blue Red Sox sweatshirt would have to do.
She pulled on some socks before heading to the bathroom.
Blake Carmichael was coming over to pick her up. She could hardly believe it.
Of course, like every single woman at Seaview Bible Church, she’d been checking him out for months. He was more attractive in person than he was on the big screen. For a movie star, he seemed like a nice guy the few times she’d met him. He attended an all-men’s Sunday school class, and he didn’t go to any of the singles events the church put on. He did volunteer and they’d worked on a couple of projects together.
They’d chatted a few times, and she’d introduced Kelsey to him months before, since Kelsey went to school with Eli. But really, she barely knew the man.
Her hair was a straggly mess. She grabbed a brush and started to work out the snarls, cursing its coarseness for the millionth time. Giving up, she ran back to the bedroom and grabbed the navy Red Sox cap and stuck it on her head, pulling her long, thick hair through the gap in the back. She secured it with a ponytail holder.
She thought of Kelsey. Where could she and Eli be going in the middle of the night? And what were they doing?
A small wave of anxiety tugged at her heart.
Oh Lord, keep her safe. Don’t let her do anything stupid.
Tallia thought of all the trouble a teenaged girl could get into and shuddered.
Keep her pure, Lord. Please keep her pure.
When Tallia found Kelsey, the teen was due for a tight hug followed by a smack upside the head.
Tallia needed makeup. Did she have time?
The obnoxious buzzer sounded. Nope, no time.
Tallia ran into the living room, flipped on the overhead light, pushed the intercom, and spoke. “Hello?”
“Hi, it’s Blake. I’m here.”
“Come on up. Second floor, door’s open.” She pushed the button to unlock the outside door, opened the door to the hallway, and ran back into her bedroom.
A moment later she heard a soft knock on the open door. “Come in.” She yelled through the small space.
The door creaked.
“Tallia?”
Blake’s deep voice sent a small shiver down her spine. She stifled a nervous laugh as she answered. “Be right there, Blake.”
She rummaged through her closet. Sneakers? But where was the other one? No time to look. Pumps? Right, searching for two teenagers in the middle of the night would probably not go well in spicy, red leather heels. Coffee brown cotton boots with rubber soles. Perfect. She slipped on the first boot, grabbed the second, and hobbled down the short hallway towards Blake.
Her heart dropped when she entered the living room. The apartment was a pit. Dirty dishes overflowed in the kitchen sink. The living room was a disaster and more crowded because of the Christmas tree in front of the window.
And Blake Carmichael’s tall frame and broad shoulders seemed to fill half the tiny space as he stood amid the clutter. In his radiance, the rest of the room looked dingier than usual.
He wasn’t looking at the mess, though. He was standing in front of Tallia’s favorite painting, studying it.
“Hey. Sorry to make you wait.” She said, plopping on the couch to pull on the second boot. “I’m sure you’re anxious to get going.”
Blake smiled. “No problem.” He turned back to the painting. His finger grazed the signature on the bottom right corner. “You painted this?”
“Yes. What do you think?”
“It’s…indescribable.”
“Like indescribably awful? Or head-on collision indescribable?”
“What? No, it’s amazing. You’re very talented.”
She looked u
p at the picture, though she’d seen it many times. It was the first of many. Realistic, with just a touch of the fantastic. A city park, a little league field, a baseball game going on. In the background, the World Trade Center. When she’d first painted it, she’d added a plane just about to crash into the north tower. Then she’d covered over that and painted a plane on the other side. As if it missed.
And she’d covered over that, too.
The first plane was too much reality, the second, too much fantasy.
There was no airplane in the picture now. It was a pre-9-11 reality. The pitcher had her brother’s nose, and the boy sliding into home had his eyes. Everybody who’d known him saw Sam’s face in the businessman standing at the edge of the field. He was young—mid-twenties—and looked like he’d just stopped for a moment to watch, to reminisce about his own little league days. He stared at the boys, wonder on his face.
Just the way he’d looked the last time she saw him.
Blake pointed at the man in the picture. “Amazing detail. It looks as if he has somewhere he has to be, but he just couldn’t help but stop and watch.”
Blake had pulled Sam out right away, though his small image was one of many people in the picture. “Thank you.”
He turned her way. “You ready?”
“Yup.” She stood, grabbed her coat, and headed towards the door.
“Did you leave a note, in case she returns?”
“Oh, good idea!” Tallia stepped beyond the cluttered bar into the tiny kitchen, yanked open her junk drawer, and rummaged inside for a piece of paper. No notepad. No loose paper. She finally laid her hands on an old business card, pulled out a pen, and wrote on the back, I’m looking for you. Call me ASAP!
She left the note on the end of the bar and hoped Kelsey would see it.
Blake led the way out the door.
Tallia climbed into the passenger seat of Blake’s expensive SUV. She wondered if he realized he’d parked right beside her white, nineties-model sedan. She settled back into the softest leather seats she’d ever felt and immediately felt guilty. “Sorry, Casper.” She said to her sad-looking car.