Page 2 of Getting Wrapped Up

Joe knew his brother didn’t mean it. This accident, and the resulting head injury, had scared Levi. It helped that the doctor had taken Joe’s advice and painted Levi a very grim picture of what could have been and what could still happen if he didn’t take care of himself now. The concussion could have been a much more severe injury, one that could have had permanent consequences. That was no lie and barely an exaggeration.

“I need to turn over a new leaf.” Levi was still leaning back in the bed, his eyes closed. His voice was low enough that Joe reached for the volume on his computer.

“I agree,” Joe said simply.

Joe knew all about Levi’s lifestyle. He’d been living a very similar one less than three years ago. Before he’d come to Sapphire Falls and met Phoebe. He’d had no idea exactly how much his life really was going to change, and he loved every single bit of it.

The scent of fruit hit him and he looked down at Kaelyn, perched in his lap, happily eating her snack. Joe smiled at her and she returned the grin. His heart clenched so hard that he couldn’t breathe for a moment.

Levi could use a huge dose of what Joe had. He didn’t know what he was missing.

And Joe wanted him to know. Levi might squander money, might get easily bored with women and might have a slightly crooked moral compass, but he was Joe’s brother and Joe loved him. He wanted him happy. He wanted him fulfilled. He wanted him not dead in a ditch.

It wasn’t like Joe hadn’t tried giving advice, but Levi had a hard head.

Which was fortunate when he plowed his car into ditches.

“Maybe you should come hang out in Sapphire Falls for a while,” Joe said, still looking at his daughter. She was the spitting image of her mother—bright red curls, huge grin and sparkly personality. Joe had never known he could love anyone as much as he loved his wife and daughter. He would do anything to keep them safe and happy. He always put them before anything he wanted for himself.

Levi needed that—something that was more important to him than himself. Levi was an incredibly intelligent guy. Joe had suspected for a long time that Levi’s problem was mostly that he had no challenges, nothing to keep his attention or engage his mind for longer than about fifteen minutes. Levi was like a big kid who had never been given any rules and had an unlimited allowance at his disposal. He jumped from one thing, one party, one woman, to another like he was flipping channels on a television, unable to find anything worth watching for long.

Levi sat up and looked into the screen. “Seriously? You want me to come to Sapphire Falls?”

“Yes,” Joe said firmly. “It’s the holidays. The last place you need to be is in Vegas with all the parties and stuff.” Levi would never be able to resist all of that. “Come stay with us. Phoebe will fuss over you, you can kick back and eat homemade everything. You can sleep late and relax. It’s exactly what you need.”

The sleepy little town of Sapphire Falls, population twelve hundred and twenty one, was the exact opposite of Levi’s pace. He loved the lights, noise and over-the-top feeling in Vegas. He and Joe had literally been raised amongst the neon and craziness so for years they’d both accepted it as normal. Joe had, fortunately, landed in Sapphire Falls and now couldn’t imagine living anywhere that didn’t have things like the annual town festival and the strawberry festival and the winter festival. They were really into festivals. But the flashiest Sapphire Falls got was with the fireworks at…well, all of the festivals…and the Christmas tree lighting in the town square.

“Are you sure that would be okay?” Levi asked.

It occurred to Joe that he’d never invited Levi to Sapphire Falls. He got a kick out of sending photos and texts or emails about the town because he knew that Levi would laugh and shake his head and think Joe was making half of the stuff up. But the senior citizens really did teach the kindergartners to ballroom dance, and they really did have a pumpkin festival, complete with a pumpkin-pie-eating contest, and they really did have music playing softly overhead in the downtown area at all times. Sometimes it was Frank Sinatra, sometimes it was fifties rock and roll, sometimes it was old country—Johnny Cash and company—sometimes it was instrumental.

Now that it was the holidays, the seemingly constant festive feel in Sapphire Falls had been kicked up another notch. They’d had a cocoa tasting in the square last week. The square had been completely decked out and there was a horse-drawn sleigh driving around town giving people rides. And the music was now twenty-four seven Christmas carols. Of course.

“I want you here for Christmas,” Joe said. Levi needed to get out of Vegas, but it was also because he was Joe’s brother. Joe had never realized all he’d been missing not having a close family. Now that he had Phoebe and Kaelyn and all of Phoebe’s family—more than twenty-five percent of the town—and their friends, Joe couldn’t imagine ever being where Levi was right now.

Joe and Levi’s family wasn’t traditional in really any sense. Their grandfather and father headed up Spencer Enterprises and owned several casinos in the US. Their primary offices were in Vegas and, yes, Joe and Levi had more or less grown up in casinos.

Their childhoods—raised by two parents who were together for seemingly every reason but love—surrounded by scantily clad women, neon and people throwing money around, whether they could afford it or not, had been…interesting.

Up until three years ago, Joe had embraced it all. It was fun to live hard with no consequences. Two things that passed through the male genes in the Spencer family was an absolute love for all things excessive and the lack of shame.

They could have been poster children for the seven deadly sins.

Then Joe had awakened in a bed in a hotel room in a city with no recollection of how he’d gotten there or even wheretherewas for several long, frightening minutes. He’d decided then and there to change his life.

Levi hadfinallyhit rock bottom, and Joe knew exactly what his brother needed.

“I could probably come spend a few days,” Levi said.

Joe grinned. He could tell his brother liked the idea but didn’t want to show how much it meant to him.

“Sapphire Falls is the perfect idea,” Joe said. The small town he now considered home had saved him in every way a man could be saved. “Stay all the way through New Year’s. Recover, relax. You won’t believe how real people spend Christmas, man. It’s like every Christmas card, story, song or movie you’ve ever seen or heard.”

Christmas was magical in Sapphire Falls. It was perfect and nothing could heal a black, cold soul like Christmas in the country.

Christmas with his family had consisted of a house full of people that Joe didn’t even know, walking in on his father screwing some lady Joe had never seen before on the couch in the den, his mother kissing some guy he’d never seen before under the mistletoe and everyone getting drunk and stupid.

Real keepsake memories there.