Robyn Grady

New Year's Wish


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away. She was doing this. She was going to be impulsive. And daring. Not Lindsey-like.

      Needing a distraction, she glanced down at the resolution list on the card. “Do you do resolutions?”

      “Seriously?” he asked with a mocking look. “Do I look like someone who wants to better myself?”

      She shook her head, but realized in that instant that he was playing at being the bad-boy snowboarder she’d always thought he was. “I’m not sure about that. I think there is a big part of Carter Shaw the world never gets to see.”

      He shook his head. “Nah. I mean, there are those tattoos, but otherwise, what you see is what you get.”

      She doubted that. She was on to him. Why did he work so hard to be something he wasn’t? For that matter, why did she? Because it was easier than letting the world see who she truly was.

      “What food do you want to try next year?” she asked, reading from the list and hoping that she could keep her courage until midnight. Only another fifteen minutes. She wanted him. She wanted this New Year’s Eve to be different from all the rest.

      “Food, eh?” He wrinkled his forehead. “Not sure. I’m going with one of my cousins on a trip in Iceland to see a reindeer farm. So maybe reindeer?”

      “I bet it doesn’t taste like chicken,” she said with a half smile. “When is that trip?”

      “In the fall. It’s a Northern Lights trip. We spend three weeks up close to the Arctic Circle living with the locals and watching each night for the aurora borealis.”

      That sounded...cold, but intriguing. “Have you done anything like that before?”

      “Nah. This is the first year that I’m not competing anymore.”

      She looked at him in surprise. “What? Why not?” If not for her reconstructed knee, she’d still be training and focusing on four years from now. The next winter games.

      “I have gold medals and more titles that one man could ask for. It’s time to set my sights on something else.”

      “Such as...?” she asked, leaning closer. This is what she was searching for. What came after competing the way they had for most of their life? It was different for Carter because he’d been born with a silver spoon in his mouth. A little rich kid who got whatever he wanted. But that had only carried him so far. She knew that he’d worked as hard as she had to get to the winter games.

      “Not sure. But this is my year of adventure. My year to find out. I’m working on that charity you’re involved with to help kids get started in winter sports, because that’s new for me. The old man is glad to see me giving back. Can you believe he said that to me?” Carter scowled. “I’ve given back a lot over the years.”

      For a moment she caught a glimpse of the real Carter. “You have. I’ve heard about the board you developed. It changed snowboarding.”

      “Yeah, that was nothing,” he said, flashing a grin at her. And the real man disappeared behind that flirty facade. “So what new food are you going to try?”

      “Nothing exotic like you. I have a thing about dairy and have usually not eaten cheese. I know that sounds silly but this year I think I’ll give it a try.”

      He lifted a brow. “Cheese?”

      “Yes.”

      “You seriously don’t eat cheese?” he asked.

      She had friends who acted the same way when she mentioned it. “I don’t like dairy stuff usually.”

      “Cheeseburgers?”

      “Nope.”

      “Pizza?” he prodded.

      “Pesto-based pizza with fresh tomatoes. No cheese.”

      “Weirdo,” he said.

      “Like you’re normal!”

      “Who wants to be normal?” he scoffed. “Okay...all kidding aside, what new thing are you really going to try?”

      She looked at him for a long minute before the two lemon-drop martinis and her courage finally caught up with her mouth. “You.”

       2

      “ME?”

      “Yes, you. Remember all those times you badgered me for a kiss?” she asked.

      He did. It had been a game for him since that first meeting. He’d wanted her, but she was out of his league. A classy woman—even at seventeen—who wouldn’t give him a second glance. Of course, that hadn’t stopped him. He’d teased her relentlessly, invaded her personal space and kept clamoring for a kiss.

      “The last time I asked I thought I spooked you,” he said, getting to the heart of the reason why he was really sitting with Lindsey Collins, who, despite her request for a kiss, would more than likely not end up in his bed this evening. He’d pushed her in Sochi. Had goaded her into agreeing that she’d kiss him if he beat his world-record time, and still she hadn’t.

      Not that he’d ever really expected her to fulfill her end of the bargain.

      To him it had seemed like a simple little bet. Something to push her, because it had been ten years of flirting and it had seemed ridiculous to continue playing that game. And he’d been feeling trapped by his coach and sponsors, who’d wanted him to sign a new deal to keep doing the same thing he’d always done. So instead of acting like a man, he’d done what he always did and sought out Lindsey before her run to demand what he’d always wanted from her.

      “It wasn’t you. God, please, don’t think that crash had anything to do with you,” she said, reaching over to put her hand on his.

      She leaned in, and the scent of her perfume filled the air around him. Her brown eyes were sincere as they met his. She squeezed his hand. “My crash was... I’m not sure what, but it wasn’t you. I’ve been over the footage a million times. I wish that was an exaggeration, but it’s not. I’ve watched it over and over again, trying to figure out what I could have done differently. Did you see how smooth I was at the top?”

      “I did.” He’d watched her run like everyone else. But for him, he’d felt that sense of pride he always did in her. He’d thought this time she’d beat him, and maybe that would put an end to his pursuit of her. Because she’d told him if she won that was the end of his kissing taunts.

      But instead she’d crashed midway through her run. Her body and skis tumbling over each other. His heart had stopped beating for a second. She’d looked small and fragile as she’d crashed into the bright orange safety webbing. Guilt and fear had warred inside him.

      “Well, it wasn’t you. I think I hit the snow wrong out of the gate. My coach has a couple of theories, as well. But, honestly, I’m not so scared of being kissed that I’d crash.

      “Kissed lots of guys, have you?”

      She made a face. “A lady doesn’t tell.”

      “Apologies.”

      “But I don’t mind telling you that the anticipation with you has been killing me. I want to believe when you do kiss me it will be spectacular. However, given that it’s been ten years of waiting, I can’t rule out the possibility that it might be a dud.”

      He laughed. Threw his head back and just forgot everything else in this moment except for Lindsey. She was as nutty as he was but just covered it up better.

      “It might. Or it could be the best damned thing either of us ever experiences.”

      She let go of his hand and settled back against the seat. “I guess that’s why I’ve made you my resolution.”

      There