Snowbound Bride-to-Be
inside the car. In case . Well, that, and to cover the mess of her hair in case they stopped anywhere along the way. The cop might have even looked at him differently if he had spotted the baby’s hair.
    If you can’t even look after her hair, how can you be trusted with the larger picture?
    “I hate this hat,” he muttered, though what he really hated was that question.
    “Why’s that?”
    “It never seems to go on right.”
    “Ah.” It was a strangled sound.
    Ryder shot her a look. She was smiling, biting back a giggle.
    He glared at her. He disliked merriment nearly as much as Christmas, especially when it was at his expense and made him feel self-conscious about his baby skills. “Is something funny?” he asked, annoyed.
    She held up a finger, letting him know that soon she would be in control of herself. Really, she looked like an evil elf, gasping. The more she tried to stop laughing, the more she couldn’t, as if his disapproval was making her nervous. Which was good.
    “You…have…it…on…backwards.”
    He could look at it in a different way. Not that she was laughing at him, but that he’d succeeded. The sparkle of tears were gone from her eyes, replaced, that quickly, with the sparkle of laughter.
    Only he hadn’t really succeeded. Because he could clearly see she didn’t look like an evil elf, after all. The laughter chased some shadow from her eyes, making them even prettier, and the smile made him even more aware of the sensuous lilt of those puffy lips.
    He’d been here less than ten minutes, long enough to know he hated the White Christmas Inn and everything about it.
    Ryder looked away from her, frowning. He stepped back from Tess and studied the hat. “I’ll be damned. It is on backwards. No wonder it was so hard to work with.”
    A respected architect and he couldn’t get a hat on right. He was learning babies were an exercise in humility. Experimentally, he turned the headgear around the right way, admired it, allowed a small whisper of pleasure at this tiny discovery.
    “It was the placement of the pom-pom that threw me,” he decided gravely.
    “Of course,” she said, just as gravely.
    “Now I won’t have to buy another hat,” he said, allowing that little whisper of pleasure to deepen.
    He saw Emma’s look, and was astounded at how his pride was stung at her misinterpretation. “Not because I can’t afford another one,” he said sharply, “because you cannot imagine how terrible it is being the sole man shopping in the baby department.”
    Tess was crankily trying to pull that hat back off.
    “It doesn’t look like she likes hats, anyway,” Emma said.
    “Until she lets me comb her hair, she wears hats.” He tookthe hat back off and stepped aside, letting Emma see for the first time what was underneath.
    If she started laughing at him again, he was going to pick up the baby and head back into the storm, knock on the door of the first house in Willowbrook that had no Christmas decorations and beg for sanctuary from the storm.
    But Emma didn’t laugh. Her gasp of dismay was almost worse.
    Hey, it’s not as if your hair is all that different .
    But Emma’s hair was different from Tess’s. Emma’s curls looked as if she had tried , maybe too vigorously, to tame them. He felt that inexplicable urge to touch again, focused on his niece’s hair instead.
    Tess’s white blonde hair did not look as if it had been combed since the day she was born, even though it had only been two days. Her hair looked like it belonged to a monster baby.
    It formed fuzzy dreadlocks and tortured corkscrews. There was a clump at the back that looked like it might house mice, and two distinct hair horns stood up on either side of her head.
    “No nanny for the last two days,” he explained, feeling the deep sting of his own ineptitude. “And in Tess’s world, Uncle is not allowed to touch the goldilocks.”
    Emma looked skeptical, as if he might be making up a story to explain away his

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