| Christmas Revels
Summaries:
In A Holiday Fling, a British
actress and a Hollywood cameraman team up to film a Christmas show for a
good cause. Anything that happens between them will be a strictly temporary
holiday fling—or might it be more?
The Christmas Cuckoo features
a level-headed young woman who goes to the local coaching inn and comes home
with the wrong Jack Howard.
Sunshine for Christmas sends a
lonely young aristocrat to Italy for the holidays, where he finds a most
unexpected bonus. (Note: the hero is Lord Randolph Lennox from The Rake.
The Christmas Tart is the tale
of a young Frenchwoman down on her luck, whose bleak choice for survival
takes her to a new chance for happiness.
The Black Beast of Belleterre
turns Beauty and the Beast into a tender holiday love story.
Reviews:
“Christmas Revels is a great
collection for a cold winter's evening with a hot cup of tea. Mary Jo
Putney's characters are memorable and their stories are heartwarming.
Cynthia Meidinger,
TheBestReviews.com
“If you've never read Mary Jo Putney,
this collection is a delightful introduction to her compelling characters
and gifted storytelling. If you're a fan already, then you know this book
will make a great stocking stuffer for the readers on your list!”
Lenore Howard, Old
Book Barn Gazette
“CHRISTMAS REVELS is a wonderfully
warm holiday collection that displays the gift of Mary Jo Putney.”
Harriet Klausner,
TheBestReviews.com
“From one of the romance world's
biggest names, this holiday collection presents five couples who discover
life's greatest gift, love, at the happiest time of the year.”
Amazon.com
Excerpt:
Fresh from a grueling job in
Australia, cinematographer Greg Marino is home again and lazily relaxing on
his balcony. (Both Greg and Jenny Lyme were secondary characters in
The Spiral Path)
He slouched deeper in
his chair and sipped at the scalding coffee, enjoying the pleasant coolness
of the December air. It had been blazing hot in the Land Down Under, but
the filming had gone well. The raw, primitive scenery had been a
cameraman's dream. The images he'd captured had made up for the spoiled
behavior of the movie's two stars. Actors. Couldn't live with them,
couldn't live without 'em.
In mid-January he would be off to Argentina for the biggest budget, highest
profile film of his career, but he had nothing booked before then. Maybe
after he finished the coffee he'd call his manager to see if anyone wanted
him to shoot a commercial or two. Such jobs kept him busy between feature
films, paid well, and often provided opportunities to try exciting new
techniques.
The cell phone played the
first few notes of "Für Elise." Wondering if a commercial had come looking
for him, he answered, suppressing another yawn. "H'lo."
"Greg-is that you?"
Not his manager. The
female voice was deliciously British and familiar, but surely it couldn't
be….. "Yep, it's me. Sorry if I'm slow, but who is this?" With his luck,
she was probably a high class aluminum siding saleswoman.
"Jenny Lyme."
"Jenny!" He came awake
fast, amazed that his caller really was Jenny. As if he could have
forgotten her. Trying not to sound like a slavering idiot, he said, "Nice
to hear from you. Are you in Los Angeles? If you are, let me take you out
to lunch."
Smart, witty, and down to earth,
Jenny was the kind of actor who made up for the prima donnas. She was also
drop dead gorgeous-a brunette stunner who stood out even in a business where
beautiful women were a dime a dozen.
Strange things could
happen on a movie set, and Greg's brief fling with Jenny was proof.
Ordinarily their relationship would never have gone beyond casual chat, but
she had been weeping her heart out over an actor boyfriend who'd thrown her
over in favor of a high profile affair with a famous French actress twenty
years his senior.
Greg had been there with a
sympathetic shoulder and a willingness to do anything that would make her
feel better. Though he hadn't been able to cure Jenny's broken heart, he'd
done his best, and even coaxed a few smiles from her. In return, he had
acquired some indelible memories to warm his nights.
Her rich chuckle
interrupted his reverie. "Sorry, no, I'm in London."
Damn. "What can I do for
you?"
"I have a…a proposition
for you."
He blinked, then ordered
his libido to quit looking for double meanings. "Are you turning director
and looking for a cinematographer?"
"Not exactly. But
something like that."
"Yes?"
She drew a breath that
could be heard a third of the way round the globe. "This is a charity
project. I grew up in a village in the Cotswolds-that's west of London and
very pretty-and I still have a home there. The parish tithe barn was turned
into a community center just after the war, and it's a wonderful place for
plays and music practice and yoga classes and pottery and all manner of
amusements. It's the heart of Upper Bassett."
"Upper Bassett?" Hound
visions came to mind.
"To distinguish it from
Lower Bassett and Bassett on the Wold," she explained with a twinkle in her
voice. "To make a long story as short as possible, the village owns only
the lease on the barn. The actual owner is a big soulless corporation that
wants to sell the property in six months when the lease expires. Property
in Gloucestershire is staggeringly expensive, and the price they're asking
is far beyond our means. If the village wants to keep it, we have to raise
a lot of money fast."
He received more than his
share of requests for his hard-earned money, but he was willing to oblige
Jenny. "Where should I send the check?"
"That's awfully generous
of you, Greg, but I'm not calling to ask for money." For an actress who
made her living playing the sexy, good-hearted girl next door, Jenny sounded
shy. "I'm on the community center board, so I decided to stage a Christmas
mummers' play to raise money. I've persuaded some of my friends to lend a
hand, and I think we'll draw a good audience for the performances."
"But not good enough?"
"I'm afraid not. We'll
never make enough if we rely on ticket sales, so in six months Upper Bassett
will have no community center. This may not sound very important, but
community is what makes life worth living, and it can be very fragile. I
don't want to see the fabric of my native village come unraveled."
He backtracked. "What's
a mummers' play?"
"Oh, sorry. It's one of
those British things. Medieval plays, usually a combination of religious
themes grafted onto ancient fertility rites. Groups of mummers used to go
around giving short performances for begging money. That's largely died
out, but the plays are still performed on occasion. It's quite a jolly
tradition."
A light dawned. "Once I
saw a show like that in Boston. Lots of singing and dancing and melodrama.
It was a great evening."
"Ours will be, too. A
couple of days ago, it occurred to me that the best way to turn our Revels
into more money is to film the show so we can sell videos and if we're
lucky, license it to the telly."
"I think I see where
you're going with this, but there are plenty of great cameramen in England.
Can't you draft one of them?"
"Probably, but you're my
first choice. You're known for being able to do marvelous work quickly, and
your name will add value to the project." Her voice turned portentous.
"The Upper Bassett Holiday Revels, filmed by Academy Award winning
cinematographer Gregory Marino."
"That's shameless
flattery." He grinned. "Keep it up."
She had the sexiest
chuckle in the Northern Hemisphere. "Very well. This production will be a
bit of a hodgepodge, so we'll need your talent as well as your reputation.
It won't be easy to make my Morris dancers and children's choir look
dramatic instead of like amateur night. That's why I thought of you."
He toyed with the handle
of his mug, thinking that it sounded like a hoot-the kind of wildly
improvised project that he'd loved doing in his student days. But he hadn't
been a student in almost two decades, and he was tired to the bone. "You're
talking this Christmas, aren't you? Like, in the next week or so? I just
got back from Australia yesterday and I'm in no mood to climb on another
airplane and spend the holidays with strangers."
"You only just got home?
Sorry-I thought you'd had more time to recover from the last job." She
hesitated. "I know this is a lot to ask, but if you're willing, you could
be the making of this project. What would it take to persuade you to come
over?"
"Your fair white body,"
he muttered under his breath as he sipped some coffee.
"That's negotiable," she
said without missing a beat.
He swallowed the wrong
way and went into a coughing fit. When he could breathe again, he said,
"Jeez, Jenny, you shouldn't make jokes like that when I'm drinking my first
cup of coffee of the day."
"Sorry." She sounded
stricken. "That was a silly comment. I'm serious about this project, but
not to the point of giving my all for queen and country."
"Sleeping with a
cameraman is a sacrifice no one would ask of you," he agreed. "How long do
you think this would take? I assume you want the production to be magical
and exciting and intimate, not just a static record of a stage show."
"Exactly." Sensing that
he was weakening, she continued, "If you're willing, I'll buy you a plane
ticket and you can stay in my guest room. This would only take a week or
so. You can be home by Christmas, though if you'd like to try the holidays
English style, it would be lovely to have you. You can borrow my family if
you want marvelous people who will simultaneously make you feel welcome and
drive you mad."
He chuckled. "Sounds
just like my family." The sprawling Marino home in Ohio would be full of
kids and food and relatives who thought of him as the beloved oddball. They
were proud of him, but he was a goose out of water, and a target for his
mother, aunts, and sisters, all of whom wanted him to marry a nice, normal
girl, not a Hollywood type, and settle down. He spent every Christmas
fending off their good intentions. Mostly it was fun.
But Jenny's job sounded
like fun, too. How long had it been since he'd done any filming purely for
the pleasure of it? He had been working like a lunatic for years, first
taking any project he was offered to build up his credits, then, as his
reputation grew, doing movies back to back to consolidate what he'd
achieved.
It would be wonderfully
relaxing to do a project where multimillion dollar budgets weren't resting
on his shoulders. On the minus side, working with Jenny would be a mixed
blessing. He loved being around her, and unless she had changed-and she
didn't seem to have-she didn't have a snobbish bone in her.
Unfortunately, he liked
her a little too well. Prom queens-did they have them in English
schools?-didn't pair off with oddball technogeeks like him no matter how
many years had passed. Hell, she was a friend and former lover of Kenzie
Scott, superstar and possibly the handsomest man alive, while Greg was Joe
Average at best. Their brief affair had been a fluke. She had made it
clear that he was being offered a guest room, nothing more. If he recalled
his trade gossip correctly, she was currently involved with some rich
international businessman. Unavailable.
But he was good at what
he did, and quite capable of working with a woman he wanted and couldn't
have. Shooting Morris dancers-what were Morris dancers?- and Christmas in
England would be a nice change from his real life. Afterward he could fly
home to Ohio. There was always leftover turkey when his mother was in
charge of a kitchen. "Okay, Jenny, you've got a deal."
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