âWhy donât you join me in the shower?â Sam offered.
âYeah, right.â Giselle laughed, running her fingers along his skin. âYou just want me to wash your back.â
âHmm. My back wasnât exactly what I had in mind,â he replied, nipping her neck.
She sucked in a quick breath. âAh, a wicked mind. I like the way you think.â
He licked the spot heâd just nipped. âHey, Iâm only thinking that you might have missed a few spots when you showered earlier,â he said innocently. âWhy donât you let me take care of them for you?â He reached behind the curtain and turned the water on. âItâll need a little time to warm up. What temperature do you prefer?â
âI like it hot,â Giselle said, grinning. âReally, really hot.â
âThatâs good. Then thereâs something for both of us.â At her questioning look, he added,
âBecause I like it wetâ¦â
âWHEN ARE Helene and Mr. Wonderful getting here?â a muffled feminine voice asked as the kitchen door clicked closed behind Sam McKendrick, enveloping him in holiday scents of roasting turkey, pumpkin pie and fresh evergreen.
His sweeping glance, the practiced eye of a professional photographer, took in a green bean casserole in a glass dish waiting its turn in the oven, a mixing bowl surrounded by an opened bag of flour, measuring spoons and other baking paraphernalia on the yellow Formica countertop.
The crash and clang of falling pots and pans immediately followed from the lower corner cabinet where a very rounded rear was poking in the air, the speakerâs top half swallowed by the cabinet. âGot it,â the voice declared.
His new sister-in-law wiggled backward, freeing herself from the cabinet, an oversized cookie sheet in tow.
She straightened, stood, saw him and promptly dropped the cookie sheet. âOh, hell.â Within seconds, however, laughter offset the momentary consternation in her hazel eyes. âMr. Wonderful, I presume.â
Sam grinned. âActually, itâs McKendrick. Sam McKendrick. And you must be Giselle.â
âRight.â She glanced at the teakettle-shaped clock on the wall. âYouâre early.â
Giselle Randolph was a hot mess.
Her long brown hair, caught up in a clip, stuck out at an odd angle on one side, and flour dusted the end of her freckled nose. She wore a white T-shirt with I Brake For Elves in green lettering across the front, a bright red, very sexy bra visible beneath the thin T-shirt and snug gray sweats. He noted her bare feet and red toenails, a green-and-white holly berry design detailed on each of her big toes.
Enchanting with an earthy sensuality, she was the sexiest woman heâd ever met, flour or no flour on her nose.
She quickly recovered her aplomb. She smiled, wiped her hand on her thigh and extended her hand in greeting. âWelcome to the family.â
âThanks.â He shook her sticky hand and the oddest sensation zapped him, as if heâd just found something he hadnât known he was missing. Feeling slightly stunned, he shook his head to clear it and realized he was still engulfing her hand in his. He released her.
She grimaced an apology and wiped her hand ineffectually along the bottom of her T-shirt, which only tugged it tighter and threw her red plunging bra into further relief. âSorry, didnât realize it was sticky.â She waved her right hand, âAnywayâ¦so, I guess I should thank you for eloping with my sister and saving me from some god-awful pink taffeta bridesmaid dressâ¦or worse.â She pretended to shudder.
âGlad I could help.â Heâd met Helene, a tall, cool blonde who turned heads everywhere she went, when she was on vacation at a resort in the Caymans and he was there shooting a brochure adânot his typical assignment but heâd done it as a favor for his friend, who managed the resort. What followed was atypical, as well. Six whirlwind weeks and one Vegas elopement and honeymoon later and here he was, meeting the parentsâ¦and sisterâ¦on Christmas Day in suburban Atlanta.
âAnd my blushing-bride sister is where?â
âYour parents were out front working on the light displayââ
She interrupted him, laughing. âMore like fighting over the light display. You might as well get used to it. Itâs a ritual.â
He laughed along with her, âGot it.â
âHelene?â she prompted, as if she hadnât interrupted and he was the one whoâd veered off topic. She retrieved the cookie sheet from the kitchen floor and put it on the counter.