“I know.” She’d be on the phone within the next five minutes, informing Roy’s daughter that Roy is a horse’s ass, but she should fly up here right away to meet him, anyway. There’s no way I’m giving Delyla’s number to Muriel. “Let’s stick with those wool socks you made him. No need to give Roy another heartache for Christmas.” Some say Muriel was at the root of his first one, years ago.
“Don’t worry, I won’t say a word to him about it. We still got that truce, after all, and I don’t need a reason to shoot him over the holidays.” She turns to head back to the hall, but then stalls. “You know, me and that old badger go back decades, through all kinds of hardships. And, sure, we’ve had our disagreements. But I ain’t ever seen him as happy as he’s been since you’ve been around. That says somethin’.”
I snort. “You call that happy?” She heard Roy yelling at me. Hell, everyone in the hall must have heard it.
“Oh, don’t buy none of what he’s tryin’ to sell you. He pretends to enjoy his solitude, but that’s all that is. Pretending, by a chickenshit who’s too afraid to admit that he cares.”
A mental image of Roy, sitting in his quiet little cabin alone on Christmas night, hits me. A lump flares in my throat. “I think that makes me even sadder.”
“Yeah. For a man who doesn’t like pity, he sure draws a lot of it. But enough about Roy for the time being.” Muriel checks her watch. “It’s after four. Suppose we should dig out those costumes. And I need your help figurin’ out what to do with Jessie Winslow’s gingerbread house for the silent auction.”
I fall in line next to her and, while her legs are far shorter than mine, I need to hustle to keep up. “What’s wrong with Jessie’s gingerbread house?”
Muriel gives me a look. “I think it’s what you people call a ‘Pinterest fail.’”
Chapter Five
Our log home in the woods is a welcome sight when I push through the front door that night. I inhale the medley of comforting scents—the burning wood in the fireplace, fresh evergreen boughs I’ve trimmed the tables and thresholds with, and the unexpected fragrant spice of gingerbread.
The glow from a table lamp and the lit Christmas tree draws me into the living room and instantly soothes my tired body.
“Hey.” I smile at Jonah stretched out on the couch with a novel in his hand.
He breaks his gaze on the page to greet me, and a wide grin splits his handsome face. “So, what did you go by? Sugarplum? Candy Cane?”
I groan. The frumpy elf costume Muriel pulled from a trash bag and instructed me to put on is three sizes too big, torn at the seam, and smells of mothballs. I was too tired to change out of it before heading home.
“Glitter Toes?”
“Shut up.”
He shuts his book. “Frosty it is.”
“Are Astrid and Björn here … oh my God.” My mouth gapes as I take in the disaster in the dimly lit kitchen. Every square inch of counter has a bowl or pot or utensil—or all three, piled high—on it. The sink is full of dirty dishes. I squint at the splatter of white on the ceiling above the island. “Is that icing?” Our kitchen hasn’t looked like this since the weekend we moved in and assumed the remnants of Phil and his late wife’s thirty-year marriage.
“Yeah, they’re upstairs, and she said to leave it. She’ll clean everything when she gets up in the morning.”
I hope so because I spent a week scrubbing and arranging this place. My mom and Simon arrive tomorrow. “All this for gingerbread?”
“She started making some things for Christmas Eve dinner, too.”
“Right.” Astrid did say she wanted to celebrate, Norwegian style. Apparently “Norwegian style” means trashing my kitchen.
I push the mess—and my annoyance—aside and instead focus on the elaborate multitier house displayed on the dining table. “She made this?”
“Yeah. Crazy, huh? She makes them every year. That one’s actually pretty plain. Some of the ones she’s done in the past, she’s submitted to competitions. She’s won a few of them.”
“You never told me she was an artist.” I bend over to inspect the gingerbread house that sits atop a gingerbread base, surrounded by star-shaped gingerbread cookies, stacked from largest to smallest to form evergreen trees. Every edge is trimmed with white royal icing swirls and dots, piped with intricate detail. “She did this all in one day?”
“Nah. She baked the pieces back home. Packed them up really well so they wouldn’t break on the way here.”
I give him a look.
Jonah shrugs. “What can I say? She takes her gingerbread houses seriously.”
“This is incredible. Like, I wish she’d come sooner. We could have auctioned this off tonight and made some real cash.” Instead, Muriel made a twenty-dollar pity bid on Jessie’s disastrous kit house—which she was most certainly drunk while putting together.
“Did you bid on anything?”