Twins For Christmas: A Little Christmas Magic / Lone Star Twins / A Family This Christmas. Alison Roberts

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Twins For Christmas: A Little Christmas Magic / Lone Star Twins / A Family This Christmas - Alison Roberts


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he do this? Could he love Emma in the way she deserved to be loved? Without disappointing her?

      Emma could feel the tears in her eyes as she felt the way Adam’s hands were trembling.

      This big, strong man who could save a life and do such intricate manoeuvres with those hands without the slightest tremor couldn’t hide his emotions in this moment.

      This was huge. So huge that Adam was nervous. It wouldn’t last. She knew that as soon as they got over this awkward moment of shedding their clothing and they could touch each other properly, any doubts or nerves on either side would cease to exist.

      But in this brief moment of such vulnerability she realised just how much she loved Adam. She wouldn’t only be giving him her body tonight. She would be giving him her heart—for as long as he wanted it.

      Or as long as fate would allow.

      And maybe something of what she was feeling was communicated as they held each other’s gaze for such a long, long moment, because she felt that trembling stop. She saw the doubt vanish from Adam’s eyes and could see something that seemed to mirror what she was feeling herself. A reflection—or was Adam gifting her his heart?

      And then she could see—or maybe sense—the moment that desire ignited and there was nothing but the need to be as close as physically possible. There was no further awkwardness. Anything that was going to stop them being skin to skin seemed to be discarded as easily as ice melting in hot sunshine.

      Adam flicked back the bed covers and then drew Emma against his body. In a heartbeat they would be lying on that bed together but she loved it that he stopped to gaze at her for a moment longer. To bend his head and give her such a tender kiss that promised he would look after her.

      That he intended to make this night unforgettable.

      Not that Emma had the slightest doubt that this would be the case but she loved being given the promise. Along with her body and her heart, Adam McAllister had just won her lifelong trust.

       CHAPTER EIGHT

      THE MAGIC WAS getting stronger.

      Emma’s gift to Adam had been received so well it seemed that he wanted to unwrap it all over again the following night, and Emma was only too happy to participate, tiptoeing into Adam’s room when the children were fast asleep.

      How amazing that the same gift could be given in both directions.

      And that parts of it could be given to others without them knowing how or why it was happening?

      They were being very careful to make sure the children didn’t realise what had changed between them but the magic was still happening.

      The new connection between Adam and Emma was sending out tendrils that were touching the children. Making them all feel like a family.

      Like when naughty Benji had mistaken the old teddy Poppy carried everywhere now, for a dog toy and had grabbed its leg. Poppy had tried to keep hold of it but ended up pulling off the damaged arm and she had been distraught.

      ‘Emma can fix it,’ Adam consoled her.

      ‘Daddy can fix it,’ Emma said at the same time.

      They looked at each other and smiled.

      ‘You’re good at sewing,’ Adam said. ‘I’ve seen that pretty dress you made Poppy for the play.’

      ‘You’re the doctor,’ she said solemnly. ‘An amputated arm is much more in your line of work.’

      ‘Aye …’ Adam nodded thoughtfully but his eyes held a mischievous glint. ‘I’ll need a scrub nurse, though.’

      ‘I love new jobs.’ It was hard not to grin but Poppy was still sobbing.

      ‘We need a clean sheet,’ Adam told her, ‘so we’ve got an operating table. Ollie? Can you go and bring my doctor bag, please?’

      It was a treat, turning the small disaster into a game that the children were fascinated by. With a clean sheet on the table, Adam pretended to give teddy an anaesthetic with a nebuliser. He’d found masks and gloves for both he and Emma to wear and he seemed more than happy to use up other medical supplies, like the suture kit.

      It might have been a game but watching Adam draw the teddy’s furry fabric together and make the complicated-looking knots of real sutures impressed Emma as much as it did the children. Their father was doing his important, real work at home. For teddy.

      ‘Pay attention, scrub nurse,’ Adam growled at one point. ‘You have to cut the thread now.’

      Emma giggled and, after a startled moment, so did both the children.

      Teddy’s arm got bandaged when the operation was finished and then he got sent off to Intensive Care in Poppy’s bedroom because it was bedtime. Ollie got to carry him because he’d been promoted to orderly.

      ‘I’ll bet they’ll remember that for the rest of their lives,’ Emma told Adam later that night as she lay in his arms yet again. ‘The night Daddy operated on teddy.’

      ‘I think I’ll remember it,’ Adam replied quietly. ‘It was special.’

      ‘Magic,’ Emma agreed happily.

      ‘Aye …’ Adam bent his head to kiss her again. ‘Like you …’

      The newest member of the Braeburn McAllister clan was born in the new light of the day after teddy’s surgery.

      Everyone in the village assumed that was why Dr McAllister was looking so happy. He had a bonny new niece and everybody was fine and his mother would head home in a couple of weeks and life would carry on just the same but better.

      ‘They’ve called the wee lassie Holly—did you hear? Because she’s been born sae close to Christmas.’

      If anyone wondered why that Miss Sinclair seemed to be just as happy as the rest of the family, even though she was no relation to the new bairn, they just gave each other knowing looks. She was always a happy wee thing, wasn’t she? A bit different, mind, with strange clothes and carrying her guitar with her everywhere, but you couldn’t say a word against how she looked after those twins and the way she was getting involved with the school’s Christmas production and even with the fundraising for the hall committee.

      And, oh, my … she could sing like a wee angel, couldn’t she?

      Phone calls and texts and photographs pinged between Scotland and Canada but it was a couple of days before everything came together well enough for a family gathering, courtesy of an online video chat.

      Marion and Holly were back home already with Ian—the proud husband and new father—and Catherine was using her tablet. Adam had set up his desktop computer in the living room. With a fire burning merrily in the grate and the lights on the Christmas tree twinkling, it seemed the perfect background for a digital reunion, but Catherine McAllister seemed overwhelmed by the initial visual contact.

      ‘Oh … is that a … a … Christmas tree?’

      ‘It’s our Christmas tree, Gran …’ Poppy leaned in close to the computer screen to make sure her grandmother could see her properly. ‘Emma helped us paint the balls and we sticked the sweets on the stars and we made paper chains and … and everything.’

      Catherine probably couldn’t see anything except Poppy’s nose, Emma thought, but there was no mistaking the pride and joy the small girl was radiating. She could see the screen but she was staying out of range of the camera, sitting on the floor near the fire, flanked by Bob and Benji.

      There was no mistaking the voice thickened by tears from the other end of the connection either.

      ‘That’s wonderful, darling. It’s the most beautiful Christmas tree


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