The Daddy Makeover
RaeAnne Thayne
The Iceman cometh… Hotel mogul Eben Spencer had learned long ago to keep his eyes on the ball and his emotions under wraps. And where had this philosophy got him so far? In business, to the very pinnacle of success. And in his personal life, it had brought him one beloved, if unhappy, little girl… And it was thanks to young Chloe that he met Sage Benedetto.Their bewitching neighbour was everything Eben was not – warm, emotional, open. More, she had connected with his little girl and caught his interest, so this new acquaintance was worth pursuing!
“Well. That was…unexpected.”
Sage’s colour was high but she didn’t look upset by their heated embrace, only surprised.
Eben, on the other hand, was stunned to his core.
What the hell was he thinking? This kind of thing was not at all like him. He was known in all circles – social, business or otherwise – for his cool head and detached calm. He had spent his life working hard to keep himself in check.
The urgent heat for an exotic, wild-haired girl sent him way, way out of his comfort zone.
“My apologies,” he said, his voice stiff. “I’m not quite sure what happened there.”
“Aren’t you?” Sage asked.
RAEANNE THAYNE
finds inspiration in the beautiful northern Utah mountains, where she lives with her husband and three children. Her books have won numerous honours, including a RITA
Award nomination from Romance Writers of America and a Career Achievement award from RomanticTimesBOOKreviews magazine. RaeAnne loves to hear from readers and can be reached through her website at www.raeannethayne.com or at PO Box 6682, North Logan, UT 84341, USA.
Dear Reader,
For our first home together, my husband and I bought a Victorian house built in 1904. We loved the grace and character of it – the high ceilings, the intricate mouldings, the gingerbread trim. We weren’t quite as crazy about the single-pane glass windows (painted shut!), the crumbling mortar and the lack of cupboard space.
We spent fifteen years in that house – refinishing wood floors, scraping off layer after layer of paint and wallpaper, replacing those wavy-glass windows with versions that had less charm but a great deal more energy efficiency.
As much as we loved our old house and poured our hearts into it, eventually we had to build one that met our family’s needs a little better.
When I was creating Brambleberry House, I took all my favourite things from our little redbrick Victorian – and all the elements I might have wished it had! – and incorporated them into the walls of the old house.
I hope you enjoy exploring the secrets of this sprawling mansion by the sea and the women who call it home.
All my best,
RaeAnne
The Daddy Makeover
RAEANNE THAYNE
www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)
Chapter One
On a scale of one to ten, Sage Benedetto would probably rate the concept of jogging before sunrise every day somewhere around a negative twenty.
While she highly doubted she would ever evolve enough that she could wholly enjoy these runs, after a month, she had at least grown to tolerate the activity. Her gut didn’t automatically cramp at just the idea of throwing on her running shoes and her muscles no longer started to spasm after the first few steps.
She supposed that was a good thing.
This would probably never be her favorite thing to do, but she had promised, she reminded herself. And while she had many faults—all of which somehow seemed more glaringly obvious in the pale light of early morning—breaking her word was not among them.
Despite the random muscle aches and her inherent dislike of just about any activity that involved sending her heart rate into heavy exertion mode, she had even come to discover an ethereal beauty in these quiet early-morning runs.
The towering sea stacks offshore glowed pink in the first, hesitant rays of the sun; this wide, gorgeous stretch of Oregon beach was empty, at least for a little while longer.
Soon the beach would be crowded with treasure hunters looking for shells or colored glass or any other gift the sea surrendered during the night. But for now it was hers.
Hers and Conan’s, anyway.
A huge red beast emerged from behind a cluster of rocks and shuffled to her, scaring up a seagull.
She sighed. This was the reason she was here before sunrise, her thigh muscles burning and her breath sawing raggedly. This rangy, melancholy creature was her responsibility, her curse, her unexpected legacy.
“There you are. You can’t keep slipping off your leash or we won’t do this anymore.”
Abigail’s big mutt, rescued from the pound right around the time Abigail rescued Sage, cocked his head and gazed at Sage out of doleful eyes the murky dark green of the sea in a November storm.
Some days these jogs along the shore seemed to lift his spirits—the only reason she carried on with them when she would much rather be home in bed for another hour.
This apparently wouldn’t be one of those days.
“I know,” she murmured, rubbing his chin as she slipped the leash back on. “She loved these kind of mornings, didn’t she? With the air clear and cool and sweet and the day just waiting to explode with possibilities. Anything-can-happen days, that’s what she called them.”
Conan whined a little and lowered himself to the sand, his head sagging to his forepaws as if he were entirely too exhausted to move.
“You’ve got to snap out of it, bud. We both do.”
She tried to swallow down the lump of grief that had taken up permanent residence in her throat during the past month. Her eyes burned and she wondered when these raw moments of sorrow would stop taking her by surprise.
She blinked away the tears. “Come on, dude. I’ll race you home.”
He gave her a long, considering look, then heaved to his feet and shuffled off in the direction of Brambleberry House, still a mile down the beach. Even at his most ponderous pace, Conan could outrun her. A pretty sad state of affairs, she decided, and tried to pick up her speed.
Focusing on the sand in front of her, she had only made it a few hundred yards down the beach, when she heard a sharp bark. She turned in the direction of the sound; Conan was at the end of his long retractable leash, sitting with a small figure above the high-tide mark in the sand.
The figure was a young girl, one she wasn’t even sure was old enough to be considered a tween. A young girl who was wearing only a pale green nightgown and what looked to be seashell-pink flip-flops on her feet.
To Sage’s deep surprise, Conan’s tail wagged and he nudged at the girl’s hand in a blatant invitation to pet him. She hadn’t seen Conan greet anyone with this kind of friendly enthusiasm for the better part of a month.
Sage scanned the beach looking in vain for the girl’s companion. She checked her watch and saw it was barely 6:00 a.m. What on earth was a young girl doing out here alone on an empty stretch of beach at such an hour, and in nightclothes at that?
“Morning,” she called out.
The girl waved. “Is this your dog?” she called to Sage with a big smile. “She’s so pretty!”