The Duke Who Saved Christmas Read Online Emma Hart

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Funny Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 124
Estimated words: 121898 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 609(@200wpm)___ 488(@250wpm)___ 406(@300wpm)
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“Probably, but it’s hardly guaranteed,” she retorted. “You’re not taking me home again. Do you know how much my grandparents will go on at me about how we’re both single? Christ, I’d never hear the end of it. Absolutely not.”

“Come on, Sylvie. I’m not going to abandon you and make you find your own way home when I’m perfectly capable of driving.”

“You’re not. I’ve seen you drink two beers.”

I picked up the empty bottle and pointed to the label.

She leant forward and tilted it towards her. “Ah,” she said. “Zero percent alcohol. Well, there goes that argument.”

Laughing, I put the bottle down and stood up. “You have no argument aside from, “I don’t want to.””

“Which is a perfectly good argument,” she pointed out, reluctantly getting to her feet. “The word ‘no’ is a complete sentence.”

“You’re absolutely correct, but that’s rather useless when you’re stressed, more than a bit tipsy, and it’s already below freezing outside.”

“I’m going to need you to stop making good points.” Sylvie pulled on her coat and zipped it up, then tugged gloves out from the pockets. “It’s making it terribly difficult to argue with you, and I’m getting annoyed about that.”

“Would you rather I leave you outside to freeze?” I unhooked my coat from the stand by the pub door and slipped my arms into it before also taking my hat and gloves. “If you really, really want to become a snowman, I can do that.”

“Shut up and go,” she said. “Before I change my mind.”

I laughed and opened the door, holding it for her.

She stepped outside into the darkness, and her entire body shook as the cold hit her. “Bloody hell! It’s freezing!”

“I don’t think you’ll be changing your mind anytime soon,” I teased her, nudging her away from the door.

“Piss off,” she replied, and I almost burst out laughing at hearing that phrase yet again. It was almost like it was her favourite thing to say to me. I was going to have to start keeping a tally on how many times she said it to me.

I held out my arm for her, lightly nudging her with my elbow.

She paused on fixing her scarf and looked at me. “What?”

“Here,” I said, nudging her again. “Take my arm.”

“Why?”

“Because it’s icy as fuck out here, you’re three Sauvignons in, and I’m trying to take you home, not to the hospital.”

“Goddamn stupid good arguments,” she muttered. “Where exactly are you parked?”

“The other side of the square. Have you seen how many tourists are here?”

With a heavy sigh, she stepped closer to me and looped her arm through mine, albeit stiffly.

I glanced down at her. Her thick, fluffy pink hat with the largest bobble I’d ever seen almost entirely obscured her face from my view, and I allowed a small smile to twist my lips.

She was so fucking stubborn.

No, she wasn’t.

She was independent. Sylvie had the air of a woman who didn’t need anyone at all, but of course, that wasn’t true. Everyone needed someone, even if it was an arsehole she hated who kept insisting on buying her food and taking her home.

I wasn’t even sure she hated me anymore. She was definitely still holding onto her grudge about the whole cricket ball in the face thing, but if she hated me, she wouldn’t be anywhere near me.

Perhaps we were friends.

That was all we would be, despite how attracted I was to her. Even a little drunk and stressed out of her mind, she was still an annoyingly enigmatic ball of energy that I was ridiculously drawn to.

I’d always thought the phrase ‘moth to a flame’ was quite ridiculous, but here, I couldn’t help feeling like a moth.

But Sylvie wasn’t just a flame.

She was a wildfire.

And I couldn’t look away from her.

We stepped down off the curb onto the road, and the jerk of Sylvie slipping on ice flipped me into action, and I planted my feet while grabbing her with my free hand to keep her upright. She squeaked, gripping tightly onto my arm, and I had to adjust my footing to stop her going scooting down the road and taking me with her.

“Oh, my God,” she breathed.

“Bet you’re glad I’ve got you now,” I murmured into her ear with a smile.

She pressed her forehead against my shoulder and whispered a, “Piss off,” which just made me laugh.

I helped her steady herself again and then across the road. It wasn’t half as bad on the paths, and because the snow had compacted, it made it ever so slightly easier to get some kind of grip with our shoes.

Only ever so slightly, though.

“Thank you,” she said after we’d made it across onto the square onto more stable footing. “I know I haven’t had that much to drink.”

I laughed and patted her hand on my forearm. “Normally I’d make a joke, but you’re right. You’re walking perfectly fine, but I’m guessing you were inside a lot longer than I was and missed that snow shower earlier.”


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