The Reluctant Elf (Kindle Single)
most importantly, the reviewer loved the B&B and he’s going to give you the rating you need.’
    ‘Oh that is wonderful news! So everything went well then?’
    ‘Except for the fire,’ says Mabel.
    ‘Like I said, there’s a lot to tell you. Are you tired though? We can always talk more tomorrow.’
    ‘Don’t you dare leave, Lottie. I want to hear every detail. Especially about this boyfriend of yours.’
    Aunt Kate is mightily impressed with our ingenuity at the B&B. I try glossing over some of the gorier details but Mabel is a stickler for the whole truth, not to mention a very observant little girl who seemed to know that Danny and I liked each other before we realised it ourselves.
    ‘I’m just sorry that I’ve missed Christmas,’ Aunt Kate says. ‘I do so love Christmas.’
    ‘You haven’t missed it. We’re staying here until you get out, and then we’ll all have Christmas together.’
    ‘Will you really?’
    I nod. ‘I’m not going to go back to London just yet. You’ll need help while your leg is healing, and I can work remotely for a few weeks. I’ll have my computer couriered up. Mabel doesn’t have to be back in school until mid-January.’
    ‘That will be wonderful, Lottie,’ Aunt Kate says. ‘It’s all quite wonderful, really.’
    As promised, Danny is waiting for us when we leave the hospital.
    ‘Aunt Kate’s awake!’ Mabel says. ‘And we get to stay in Wales to have another Christmas. Does that mean we get more presents from Father Christmas, Mummy?’
    ‘No, honey, I’m afraid he doesn’t do encore performances. You’ll have to wait till next year, but remember you’ve still got lots of gifts at home.’
    ‘You are staying here for a while?’ Danny asks, grabbing my hand.
    ‘For at least a few weeks,’ I say.
    ‘I fly to the US tomorrow, but I’ll be back in a week.’
    ‘And then…’
    ‘And then we’ll work something out,’ he says. ‘It’s not ideal with me here and you in London, but it is only a few hours by train. I could come down and, if you don’t mind travelling a bit, you and Mabel could come here too?’
    We kiss again. I can’t seem to get enough of him. ‘I don’t mind at all. What do you say, Mabel? Would you like to spend more weekends at Aunt Kate’s?’
    ‘Definitely, Mummy. Now that Mingus and I are friends, he’d be sad if we don’t see each other. And Aunt Kate still needs to make me her Welsh cakes. I could murder one of those.’
    ‘I’ll tell you what, Mabel,’ says Danny. ‘I’ll look up a recipe on the internet and make you some when we get back.’
    We both stare at him.
    ‘That’s okay, Danny,’ Mabel says, patting his shoulder. ‘We’d better wait for Aunt Kate to make them.’
     
    The End
     

 
    Every time you write a review, an author gets a cupcake, so if you enjoyed The Reluctant Elf , please take a minute to share your thoughts on your favourite book websites.
     
     

Get the chance to read advance review copies of Michele Gorman’s books for free before the publication date by signing up for her newsletter here (you’ll get around two emails a year).
     
    And if you sign up ( Stay Up To Date ) on Michele’s Amazon.com Page , Amazon will send you an email as soon as her new books are published.
     
    See all of Michele’s books on
    Amazon UK
    Amazon US
     
        
     
              
     
                
     

 
     
    Cinderella meets Falling Down in this wickedly funny tale about having it all
     

     
    Perfect Girl
     
    Carol is perfect… at least that’s what everyone thinks. In reality she’s sinking fast – her family treats her like their personal assistant and her boyfriend is so busy with work that he’s got her single-handedly running their relationship. Not that her job is any easier. As the only woman on the bank’s trading floor she spends twelve-hour days trying not to get sworn at or felt up by colleagues who put the "W" in banker.
     
    How long can she go on pleasing

Similar Books

The Tribune's Curse

John Maddox Roberts

Like Father

Nick Gifford

Book of Iron

Elizabeth Bear

Can't Get Enough

Tenille Brown

Accuse the Toff

John Creasey