
A Heron's Landing Novella: Hold Me Close
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Iris Morland
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Chapter 1
When Officer Matthew Haldon saw the flash of orange-red in his rearview mirror, he first thought it was a fox running about in this blizzard. When he peered more closely, he realized it wasnât a fox: it was a person. A person most decidedly stranded in a ditch on the side of the road.
Matt had been on the police force for five years now, four of those here in the tiny Missouri town of Heronâs Landing. At the moment, he wanted to get home safely, put his feet up, and maybe drink some spiked cider. Sighing, he knew that wasnât going to be happening any time soon. He slowly did a U-turn, the snow falling so hard that you couldnât see more than foot in front of you. Living in a place like Heronâs Landing made driving in the snow both a blessing and a curse: a blessing, because you were often alone on the road; a curse, because you were often alone on the road.
After what seemed like an hour, he finally got to the car and the person trying to dig themselves out. He turned on his lights so no poor soul would run into him, and he tromped into the ditch.
âHello!â he called out. âAre you all right?â
A head popped up from the other side, with that flash of orange-red again. Then, to his astonishment, the person turned out to be a woman, and not only a woman, but a gorgeous, red-haired woman who also wasnât wearing a coat.
So not only was she beautiful, she was crazy.
âMaâam, do you have a coat? Youâll freeze to death.â
The woman waded through the snow, laughing. âI forgot my coat! Can you believe that? I packed everything but my coat.â She brushed snow off of her long-sleeved t-shirt and shrugged. âIâm more concerned about my flat tire, though.â
Matt took in the woman, his chest constricting despite himself. She was rosy-cheeked, with the fullest lips heâd ever seen. She didnât seem the least bit dismayed regarding her situation.
So, yes, a high probability she was crazy.
âLet me drive you somewhere,â he offered. âItâs snowing too hard to put on a spare. Do you live around here?â Matt knew everyone in Heronâs Landing, and this woman was definitely not someone heâd ever seen before.
The womanâs initial good cheer faded. She bit her lip. âI was on my way to Kansas City. I donât know anyone around here. Is there a hotel or something close by?â
Matt considered. He could drive back to townâsome ten miles, in a blizzardâor he could be a good Samaritan and let this woman stay with him in his house that was only a mile away.
You just want to spend more time with her, his mind reasoned, but he told his mind to shut up.
âThe closest hotel is ten miles from here.â The womanâs shoulders slumped, and without considering it further, he added, âBut youâre welcome to stay with me. Until the snow stops. Then we can get a tow truck out here to get your car and get you back on the road.â
The woman considered, her eyes narrowed. She walked toward him. âHow do I know you arenât some serial killer?â
He raised his eyebrows. âIâm a police officer, maâam.â
âThat doesnât matter. You could be faking being an officer just to lure unsuspecting women to your house.â
âIn a blizzard? That seems like a lot of work to me.â
She blinked away the snowflakes caught on her lashes, and then her face broke into a smile that hit Matt right in the gut.
âOkay, Iâll take your offer.â She thrust out a hand, and he took it. âIâm Holly, by the way. You are?â
âMatt. Officer Matt Haldon.â
âGreat. Now if you could just help me get my suitcase out from underneath all of this crapâŠâ
After wrestling with more âcrapâ than he couldâve thought could be stuffed into one womanâs trunk, Matt drove Holly back to his place. She shivered, and he turned up the heat until he was sweating underneath his heavy coat. But she sighed in pleasure, which went straight to his groin.
Down, boy. Sheâs your guest. Nothing more.
Matt had broken up with his girlfriend over a year ago, and he hadnât dated much since. It didnât help that there was a dearth of eligible women here in Heronâs Landing. He wasnât much for hook-ups, either, so heâd remained celibate for the past twelve months.
That celibacy came to bite him in the ass right now. Heâd taken one look at Holly and his body had practically jumped at her. If he werenât so annoyed with himself, heâd laugh at how predictable he was.
Holly rubbed her arms.
âAre you still cold?â he asked.
âIâm okay. I still canât believe I forgot my coat. Then again, Iâm not used to winters like this.â
âWhere are you from?â
She hesitated, and he wondered what she was running from. A bad relationship? Money troubles?
Finally, she replied, âLouisiana. We donât get much snow down there.â
Now that he listened more closely, her accent had a slight Southern twang to it, although it was subtle. She mustâve lived there only for a short time, as she sounded more Midwestern overall.
âSo you decided to go on a road trip three days before Christmas but forgot to bring a coat?â
She nodded. âIt wasâŠsudden. I was distracted.â
âI guess you arenât driving home for Christmas dinner?â
âNot exactly.â
They fell silent. Matt turned on the radio, and Christmas music filled the patrol car. His own family lived in Illinois, and his current work schedule hadnât allowed him to go home. Thus, he was spending Christmas alone. Heâd told himself he didnât care, but if he were being honest, he was rather depressed about it. It was the first Christmas without Melanie, the first time they wouldnât cook dinner together and open presents underneath the tree.
After driving very slowly through the blinding snow, Matt turned down the lane to get to his house, a two-story cabin that heâd built three years ago with Melanie in mind. Now it just reminded him of his ex-girlfriend with every curtain, every piece of furniture. When theyâd broken up, Melanie had told him that she didnât want to live in this hell hole anymoreâher words, not his.
I canât do this anymore, sheâd said, like heâd forced her to live with him and love him. Iâm sorry, but I canât.
He shook off the memories as he helped Holly with her luggage. Opening the door, he flipped on the hall light to reveal two excited dogs barking and dancing excitedly in front of them.
Matt crouched in front of the canines. âThis is Arya, and this is Sansa.â
The two muttsâhe thought they were part lab, part setter, and part who knew whatâwagged their tails so hard they were in danger of falling over.
Holly leaned down to pet Arya, who snuffled. âGame of Thrones fan?â
âYeah. At least, I was. The names were my exâs idea.â
At the mention of Melanie, they both fell silent, and Matt silently cursed himself. Way to go. How about you share all of your dirty laundry before she even sits down?
âI think Iâm going to take a shower to warm up,â Holly said.
Matt jumped up, guilt assailing him. Here she was, freezing and tired, and he was talking about his ex-girlfriend. âOf course. Let me show you to your room. Arya, Sansa, go lie down.â
After showing Holly to her room and the adjoining bathroom, Matt went downstairs to stare inside his fridge. Beer, shredded cheese, two eggs, and an almost empty half-gallon of milk. He went to the pantry, and he found a bag of rice that was probably older than this house and not much else. Thinking back, he couldnât remember the last time heâd gone grocery shopping. Heâd gotten take-out or gone to the one bar in Heronâs Landing as opposed to cooking at home for the most part since heâd broken up with Melanie, and now he cursed himself for being such a lazy bachelor. He couldnât very well feed Holly old rice and beer, now could he?
All thoughts of food fled when Holly came downstairs, her hair wrapped in a towel and wearing some fancy robe over what he assumed was a nightgown. She looked fresh and clean, her cheeks scrubbed until they were rosy, and she smelled like flowers.
She glanced down at her attire and smiled at his expression. âI really hate wearing real clothes around the house,â she explained. âAnd weâre snowed in, so why keep my jeans on? Plus, I hate wearing a bra.â She scrunched her noseâher adorable, pert little noseâand Matt almost dropped the beer heâd just grabbed from the fridge.
He did not need to think about Holly not wearing a bra. Did she want to kill him? She was going to kill him.
He scrabbled around in the drawer for a bottle opener, trying to banish the thought of what Holly looked like without a bra onâor anything at all.
After finally finding the opener and taking a slug of beer, he said apologetically, âI donât have much food.â
She opened his fridge and then laughed. âDo you even eat?â She shook a bag of what he thought was maybe broccoli at him. âLook at this! Youâre such a guy.â
âIâm not much for cooking, I guess.â
âI can see that.â She pulled out cheese, butter, and then snagged the loaf of bread from the counter. âWhereâs your skillet? Oh, and do you have mayo? Wait, of course you do. Mmm, let me cut some of these veggies up, and Iâll make us some grilled cheeses youâll never forget.â
Holly shooed him from the kitchen, rather like a wife would, and Matt sat down in the living room, hearing her hum to herself as she cooked. He stared at the snow falling outside, his heart beating fast, and he wondered if this was all a dream. How had he ended up with this gorgeous, lovely woman in his house? And for the night?
He drank his beer, tipping it back until heâd finished it in only a few gulps.
âHere we go.â Holly stepped into the living room, Sansa and Arya right next to her, and placed the plates on the table in front of the couch. âEat up. Iâm starving.â
Matt dug into the cheesy goodness, practically moaning at how sheâd managed to make the cheese both crispy and gooey. He hadnât had a grilled cheese since he was a kid.
âThis is amazing.â He glanced at the sandwich again. âI didnât even know I had red onion in the fridge. Wait, is this Gouda? How the hell did you find Gouda around here?â
âI have special powers. What do you eat every night, though, pizza? Wings?â
He shrugged. âSometimes pizza and wings.â
âWell then, arenât you glad I showed up to get your butt in gear.â She took a big bite of sandwich and made a little sound in the back of her throat, which only drove Matt even crazier.
When theyâd finished eating, and Matt had given a bite each to the dogs who now rested at their feet, he asked, âWhy were you headed to Kansas City?â
Holly seemed to close in on herself, and he regretted the question immediately. She shrugged, taking off the towel and letting her red hair fall down to her shoulders. She began to braid it with absentminded strokes.
âI just needed to get away, thatâs all,â she finally said.
âI get that. Sometimes this town gets to be too much, even though itâs not even 300 people. My family lives in Illinois, but I couldnât get there this year. So itâs just me and the dogs for Christmas.â
He knew he was rambling, but it was better than feeling Hollyâs silence and dismay. He watched as she braided her hair, her face contemplative. When she realized she didnât have something to tie off the braid, she flung it over her shoulder and turned to him.
âLetâs not talk about me. What about you?â She waited in expectation.
About him? He was nobody. He was a cop in a small town doing his job. But she was waiting, so he cleared his throat and replied, âIâve been a cop for five years. I grew up in Illinois. I hate peas.â
She frowned. âMatt. Come on, tell meâŠâ She thought a moment. âTell me what you wanted to be when you grew up.â
That was easy. âA police officer.â
âSeriously? Okay, then, where all have you traveled?â
âIllinois, Missouri, Kansas. I went to Iowa once for a basketball tournament in high school. Thatâs it.â He couldnât help but smile at her expression. âIâm a boring person, Iâm afraid.â
âNobodyâs boring. You just say that. For instance, my grandma never traveled outside of her town until she was thirty, but she was the most fascinating person Iâve ever met. She was married three times by the time she was thirty-five, and weâre pretty sure my uncle Tedâs father is the milkman who swore he had an affair with granny off and on for years. Granny also could shoot a target dead-on when it was raining and she had only one eye open.â
âImpressive.â
âNow youâre making fun of me.â
He couldnât help it: he touched a strand of her hair that had fallen from her makeshift braid. âNo, Iâve just never met anyone like you before.â
âWhat, youâve never met a woman who got stranded in a blizzard?â
âNo, Iâve never met one who was soâŠalive.â And it was true: theyâd only met hours ago, and yet heâd felt a connection with her the first time sheâd smiled. Everything about her radiated vitality. Holly could take on the world and laugh the entire time.
She didnât say anything, though. Her green eyes widened, and he wanted to kiss the freckles dotted across her cheeks.
As if sensing the tension in the room, Arya woofed at their feet, which effectively ended the moment.
âUm, you want a beer?â Matt stood up, taking their plates with him into the kitchen. At the sink, he almost stuck his head under the cold water to get himself to calm down.
Holly was staying with him because she had nowhere else to go. He wasnât going to take advantage of that fact. It didnât matter that he hadnât had sex in forever. It didnât matter that she was beautiful and sweet and her hair was like a flame.
âIâll just get a glass of water,â she said as she walked into the kitchen.
He jumped, almost dropping the plate in his hand. Luckily, she didnât seem to notice, but grabbed a glass from the cabinet like sheâd lived here for ages.
Matt was about to tell her he was going to sleepâeven though it was only seven oâclockâwhen the lights flickered and died, plunging the house into darkness.












































