Lakeshore Chronicles [10] Candlelight Christmas

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Book: Read Lakeshore Chronicles [10] Candlelight Christmas for Free Online
Authors: Susan Wiggs
Tags: Contemporary Romance
stuff.”
    Charlie grabbed his Camp Kioga baseball cap and put it on. “Ready,” he said.
    They got in the car. Logan drove a banana-yellow Jeep, good for getting around when the winter snows came.
    Avalon looked like one of his ex-wife’s flawless photos today, the leaves just starting to turn, the lake placid and flat, the covered bridge over the Schuyler River drawing the last of the summer tourists. It would still be hot in Oklahoma, flat and scrubby around the air force base.
    “Excited about fifth grade?” Logan asked.
    “Oh yeah. Can’t wait.”
    “I know, buddy. School’s your job. You’ll do great. You’re going out for soccer this fall?”
    “Sure. Soccer’s cool.”
    Soccer had been Logan’s life when he was a kid, right up through high school. He still remembered the rush of a good play, the euphoria of drilling a goal home. His father rarely missed a game. It was the one thing that kept them close. Ultimately, though, the sport had become too important. Logan’s need to perform superseded common sense. In high school, his determination to impress his father had pushed him to play injured, and that had led to a ripped-up knee, multiple surgeries and a dangerous dependence on painkillers.
    Logan resigned himself to missing all of Charlie’s games. Maybe that wasn’t such a bad thing. He would find other activities to do with Charlie. Kioga in the summer, snowboarding or Florida in winter, daily phone calls, being there for his son whenever he could. He hoped like hell their time together would be enough.
    They pulled up at the inn, a historic property in a grand mansion by the lake. The main building, with its wraparound porch and belvedere tower, was reflected in the glassy water. Hiding the heaviness in his heart, Logan grabbed Charlie’s duffel bag and backpack and went up the walk. Charlie’s mom came out the door.
    Daisy looked amazing, no surprise. She’d always been smoking hot, even in high school, and she’d been as reckless and rebellious as Logan, which had led to the unplanned pregnancy in the first place. She wore her blond hair short, and her face was wreathed in smiles. Now, however, there was something new about her. The angry, reckless girl had turned into a woman—a mom. She was holding a baby on her hip. Behind her was her husband, Air Force Captain Julian Gastineaux, tall and dark, casual in civilian clothes today.
    “Charlie boy!” Daisy flung her free arm around Charlie and hugged him close to both her and the baby.
    Logan stood back, watching. An outsider.
    “Look at your sister,” Daisy said. “She’s grown so much.”
    Charlie grinned and kissed the down-fuzz head. “Hiya, Princess Caroline,” he said, then looked back at Logan. “Dad, check it out, she’s really cute.”
    “Totally cute,” Logan agreed.
    Charlie broke away to give Julian a hug. “Hi, Daddy-boy.” His nickname for Julian had always been Daddy-boy. Logan hated that.
    “Man, look at you,” Julian said. “You’re tall, my man.”
    Logan and Julian acknowledged each other with a nod. The two of them were not exactly friends, but they shared a mutual respect and a love for Charlie.
    “Congratulations,” Logan said. “Your baby’s really cute.”
    “Thanks.”
    Charlie took command of his sister, holding her with care. He showed her and Julian the paddle he’d painted and all the campers had autographed. Each camper went home with one.
    “So, his stuff is here,” Logan said to Daisy. “He’s all set.”
    “Thanks.” She gazed up at him, her blue eyes a stranger’s eyes now. “How are you?”
    “Good.” It still felt surreal, talking to this person who had once been his whole world. He used to be on intimate terms with her not just physically, but with her every thought, her every dream and desire. Now she was just someone he didn’t really know anymore. She had truly moved on. The baby was stark evidence of that. Daisy had made a new life for herself.
    Logan couldn’t say

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