Meredith Webber

Orphan Under the Christmas Tree


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       More Praise for Meredith Webber:

      ‘Meredith Webber does a beautiful job

      as she crafts one of the most unique romances I’ve read in a while. Reading a tale by Meredith Webber is always a pleasure, and

      THE HEART SURGEON’S BABY SURPRISE

      is no exception!’ —Book Illuminations on THE HEART SURGEON’S BABY SURPRISE

      Orphan Under The Christmas Tree

      Meredith Webber

      

www.millsandboon.co.uk

      Table of Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       Praise

       Dedication

       CHAPTER ONE

       CHAPTER TWO

       CHAPTER THREE

       CHAPTER FOUR

       CHAPTER FIVE

       CHAPTER SIX

       CHAPTER SEVEN

       CHAPTER EIGHT

       CHAPTER NINE

       CHAPTER TEN

       CHAPTER ELEVEN

       Copyright

       For my sister-in-law Caroline, an inspirational refuge worker

      CHAPTER ONE

      SHE was a psychologist.

      She should be able to look at a problem, consider it from all angles, and then solve it.

      So why was Crystal Cove’s annual bunfight of the raising of the Christmas tree causing Lauren Cooper such grief?

      Easy answer!

      Nat Williams would be there. Nat Williams, Crystal Cove’s very own surfing superstar, current world number one, had been invited to press the button that would engage the ropes and pulleys that would lift the already decorated tree into position in the middle of the park that ran along the esplanade above the Cove’s sheltered northern beach.

      In her head, Lauren could hear her friend, Jo Harris, saying, ‘But you’re over him,’ and Lauren was.

      Totally, and years ago, and relieved to be out from under his spell!

      Not even heart-broken, not even then at seventeen, so why now, at twenty-nine, did she feel ill at the thought of meeting him again?

      Lauren, Crystal Cove’s only practising psychologist, manager of the local women’s refuge and general all-round competent person, rested her elbows on her desk, put her head in her hands, and groaned.

      ‘Migraine?’

      Wrong time and wrong place to be groaning! She’d completely forgotten she was at her desk at the hospital. The problem was she shared her office space with other therapists, and so it was open to any hospital personnel who happened to be wandering around.

      She lifted her head and looked at the person who happened to be wandering around right then.

      Dr Tom Fletcher, tall, dark, lean, and so handsome just looking at him sometimes took Lauren’s breath away.

      ‘No, I’m fine,’ she told him as he pulled a chair over from an adjacent desk and settled down across from her.

      ‘Really fine,’ she emphasised, in case he hadn’t got the message the first time.

      ‘No, you’re not.’

      The words jolted Lauren out of her welter of doubt and anxiety and she frowned at him across the table. Eighteen months ago when Tom had first taken up his position as head of the Crystal Cove hospital, he’d asked her out, and she’d been very, very tempted.

      But there was something about Tom Fletcher, with his grey eyes, easy smile and over-abundance of charm that had warned her to steer clear. Going out with Tom Fletcher might have meant getting involved. Getting involved might have meant …

      She’d steered clear, reminding herself her life was just perfect as it was! She had a good job, a satisfying challenge in running the local women’s refuge, great friends, family close by—the life she wanted for herself.

      The life she’d chosen for herself!

      As for Tom, well, her refusal hadn’t dented his confidence. Since his arrival in town she’d watched him flirt with every woman in Crystal Cove; watched him squire any number of them around town, although none of the women he’d dated then deserted seemed to bear grudges against him, singing his praises as a companion, their pleasure in the affair, remaining friends with him even after the relationships had ended.

      Tom Fletcher, she’d realised very early on, was one of those men all women loved, and apparently he loved being loved by them, but he was of the ‘love them and leave them’ tribe with no intention of ever settling down.

      And to be honest, she wasn’t sure about the affairs or even his prowess as a lover because none of the women ever talked.

      Which in itself was odd …

      ‘Earth to Lauren?’

      She stared at him, unable to remember what he’d said, and unable to believe she’d drifted off into her own thoughts while the man, apparently, had something to say to her.

      ‘Sorry,’ she muttered. ‘What was it you wanted?’

      You, Tom would have liked to say, but he knew he could never say it. Oh, he’d asked her out once, but fortunately she’d said no, because as he’d grown to know Lauren Cooper he’d realised she was a woman who deserved the best of everything the world had to offer and, as far as men went, that wasn’t him.

      ‘Nothing,’ he said instead. ‘Except to know if you’re okay. You’re pale as milk, you’re sitting in an empty room way after working hours, and groaning loudly.’

      She looked into his eyes and managed a wry smile.

      ‘Not loudly, surely?’ she queried.

      ‘Loudly!’ he repeated. ‘It brought me racing from my office.’

      Her smile improved.

      ‘You? Race? Ice-cool Tom? The one who keeps his head when