A
NASCAR HOLIDAY
"A Family for Christmas" ISBN 978-0-373-77337-4
HQN
November 2008
Gib Cameron left
Tennessee right out of high school to follow his NASCAR dream,
and Cassie Wheeler would follow him as soon as she graduated.
Instead, she disappeared mid-year, then reappeared with a
husband. Fifteen years have passed, Cassie is a widowed mother
and Gib is the championship crew chief for the NASCAR Sprint Cup
series. He returns to Tennessee and discovers that the
attraction is still very much alive, but will a love they both
once thought endless be rekindled or extinguished by the secrets
that separated them? Read an
Excerpt
Coming soon!
~ Excerpt ~
"Did you know when
you made the call for two tires and a splash at Phoenix that it
would lock you into the points lead?"
Gib signed another
t-shirt and glanced over at the speaker, a young girl of maybe
thirteen or fourteen, he'd guess, wearing his team's cap with
her blond ponytail sticking out the back. Pretty insightful
question for a kid. "No," he admitted. "But we needed to get
off pit road ahead of the 560 car."
"Is it true that all
the teams in your shop get victory bonuses, no matter which team
wins?" Her eyes were blue and slightly tilted up at the corners.
Somehow they seemed familiar.
He nodded. "I think
it's a good policy."
"It seems odd to me.
You're racing against the others in your shop."
He kept signing what
other people stuck in front of him, but he found himself enjoying
this conversation too much. "It's not an easy balance," he
admitted. Tempers could fly in his very competitive business, and
no one was more driven to win than him, but he couldn't lead a team
if he couldn't control himself.
"So after a race, when
your team loses and—"
"Molly!" A younger
African-American boy skidded to a halt beside her. "Mom says we
need to leave soon."
The girl named Molly
looked exasperated. "Not yet, Andre," she whispered fiercely.
"You're gonna be in
trouble," Andre said. "We were supposed to stay together."
"I know, but I just
had to—" Her cheeks were fiery red. "Don't you know who this is?"
she muttered.
Gib finished an
autograph, then crouched down to the boy's level. "It's my fault,"
he said, extending his hand for a shake. "Hi, Andre. I'm Gib
Cameron, crew chief of the No. 501 car. Your sister and I were just
talking racing."
The boy took his hand
but rolled his eyes. "That's practically all she ever talks about."
Then his gaze widened. "The No. 501—wow! You're the champions!"
"We are," Gib agreed.
"That's really cool,"
Andre said. Then he frowned. "But I'm supposed to bring her back.
Our mom's right over there." He pointed behind him.
"Well, I don't want to
get Molly in trouble." Gib rose. "You suppose it would help if I
explained?"
Molly's eyes were the
wide ones now. "Would you?"
Gib glanced at his
aunt and uncle. They nodded and smiled. "You go right ahead, son,"
his Uncle Buck said. "We'll wait here."
"I won't be a second,"
he promised. "Andre, how about you lead us?" He glanced at Molly
and winked.
"Sure!" Andre took
off like a shot.
"Stay in sight—" Molly
ordered, then sighed as the boy did exactly the opposite.
"So you follow
racing," Gib began. "When did you start?"
She ducked her head
shyly. "I can't remember when I didn’t. I watched with my dad when
I was little. I've seen nearly every one of your races." She
smiled up at him. "I want to be in NASCAR someday."
"As a driver?" he
asked. "There are more women in NASCA every day."
"Drivers aren't the
most important part of the team," she insisted. "They come and go.
I'd like to own a team."
Gib's eyebrows flew
upward. "That's quite a goal you've got there."
She slanted him a
decidedly cocky look. "You don't believe I can?"
Gib laughed and
clapped her on the shoulder. "I'd be a fool to bet against you, I'm
beginning to think." They traded smiles. "So do you go to the
races much?"
Those eyes that seemed
so familiar darkened. "I've never been to one." She shrugged. "My
mom can't afford it." Her features grew determined. "But I'm
saving my money for the spring race. Mom doesn't like racing, but
she won't let me go alone. If I can save enough for all of us to
have tickets, I'm hoping I can change her mind." She glanced
ahead. "Uh-oh."
"Young lady, did I or
did I not tell everyone we had to stay together?"
That voice. Gib went
very still.
"But Mom—" Molly
protested. "This is—"
Even as Gib was
turning to face the woman who'd spoken, something deep in his gut
was telling him her identity before he ever took a look.
And when he did, his
heart stumbled, even as the ashes of anger and hurt sparked to life
again. The curly brown hair was shorter now, but the eyes—her
daughter's eyes—still possessed the power to level him. To strike
straight at his soul.
She stood there,
holding the hands of a small Asian girl and an undernourished little
boy. Her face had lost all color. "Gib." Her voice was barely a
whisper.
He wanted to hate
her for breaking his heart. Wanted to make her explain why she
betrayed him.
But "Hello, Cassie,"
was all he could manage.
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