Page 198 of The Holiday Clause

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Soren’s snort carried from behind the tree where branches jostled. “Yeah, right.”

“I’m sorry, did you say something, Your Royal High Maintenance?”

He peeked out from behind the mammoth tree—no doubt to toss out a quick comeback—but Greyson pulled the trigger on his drill. “Soren, hold it still!”

Six hands and two bolts later, it stood straight as a soldier. Each brother claimed a tattered box from the attic, unwrapping ornaments while Wren wove lights through the branches. Every laugh made her heart swell. Whether they realized it or not, the holidays were already bringing them closer.

“I think we’re ready,” she said, winding the last of the lights around the lowest branches.

“Drumroll,” Greyson announced, plug in hand.

Masculine hands drummed against denim thighs in crescendo. He shoved the plug into the outlet, and the branches glowed under hundreds of tiny lights, altering the room into something magical.

Silence fell like snow as they absorbed the transformation. She never knew what it was that made twinkle lights soenchanting. Maybe they were called fairy lights because they actually possessed magic.

“Wow.” Soren came to stand by her side. “You don’t even need the ornaments.”

Logan joined them. “I thought they’d be colored lights.”

Soren scowled at his brother. “Colorful lights are tacky. Mom liked a classy tree.”

“That’s the beauty of it,” Wren said. “Sometimes, tacky is fun.”

She glanced at Greyson, his expression a mixture of awe and stricken emotion. Of the three boys, he’d had the most Christmases with his mother and would therefore have the most memories to combat.

Sensing her stare, his gaze pulled from the tree, and he gave her a weak smile.

“All right, boys,” she said, lightening the mood as she draped pearl beads over her shoulder and twirled them like a 1920s flapper. “Who’s ready for some garland?”

They worked in tandem, the boys handling the heights while she and Jocelyn managed the lower branches. Compared to the dressed windows in town, they did a horrible job. But Wren decided all the cockeyed, crooked swoops and loops added character.

Stepping back, she admired the sloppy tree, proud of her boys and the effort they put into it. “Now, we decorate.”

Newer ornaments went up first since the vintage ones required more reverence and care. As they unearthed the relics from their mother’s boxes, they carefully handed them off one by one.

“That ornament goes at the top,” Magnus’s voice cut through the chatter. The room stilled as they followed his trembling finger to the ornament Logan had just hung. “Sable liked it close to the angel.”

Wren looked at the crystal snowflake, and stretched on the stepstool to move it near the crown. “Here?”

Their father nodded, satisfied, but still scowling.

When the doorbell chimed, Wren handed off the next ornament. “That’s probably my dad and my aunt.”

Monica beat her to the foyer, and greeted their guests. Bodhi and Astrid swept in on a gust of winter air and patchouli.

“Will you look at this place,” Astrid marveled. “Is that chandelier real crystal? Oh, Wren, there you are. We brought nut roast with turmeric gravy and reishi mushrooms.”

“And I made my famous kombucha stuffing.” Bodhi presented his creation like a proud alchemist.

Wren took the dish from her father and led him into the den. “Grey?”

Greyson turned and smiled as if relieved to see her family’s familiar faces. “Bodhi! Astrid!”

Wren realized then how difficult this isolated time with his father had been. The boys might be paying a toll with each grumbled criticism from Magnus’s mouth, but they were still gaining from the enforced togetherness. They were brothers, and they needed each other right now, no matter how much they fought it.

“Mr. Hawthorne, you remember my dad.”

Magnus looked over his mask and gave a nod of recognition. There had only been a handful of times Wren recalled seeing their fathers in the same room. Unlike their mothers, the two had little in common and never passed time in the same circles.