Savor the magic of the season with #1 New York Times bestselling author Debbie Macomber’s newest Christmas novel, filled with warmth, humor, the promise of love, and a dash of unexpected adventure.
Ashley Davison, a graduate student in California, desperately wants to spend the holidays with her family in Seattle. Dash Sutherland, a former army intelligence officer, has a job interview in Seattle and must arrive by December 23. Though frantic to book a last-minute flight out of San Francisco, both are out of luck: Every flight is full, and there’s only one rental car available. Ashley and Dash reluctantly decide to share the car, but neither anticipates the wild ride ahead.
At first they drive in silence, but forced into close quarters Ashley and Dash can’t help but open up. Not only do they find they have a lot in common, but there’s even a spark of romance in the air. Their feelings catch them off guard—never before has either been so excited about a first meeting. But the two are in for more twists and turns along the way as they rescue a lost puppy, run into petty thieves, and even get caught up in a case of mistaken identity. Though Ashley and Dash may never reach Seattle in time for Christmas, the season is still full of surprises—and their greatest wishes may yet come true.
Chapter One
“What? Are you kidding?” Ashley Davison couldn’t believe what she was hearing. The reservation clerk for Highland Airlines glanced up nervously. “I’m sorry, but I can’t sell you a ticket to Seattle. If you’d kindly step aside and wait a few minutes—”
“Can’t or won’t?” Ashley cut in, growing more frustrated and worried by the minute. She drew in a deep breath in an effort to control her patience. The woman behind the desk, whose name tag identified her as Stephanie, was clearly having a bad day. Getting upset with her, Ashley realized, wasn’t going to help the situation. She made a determined effort to lower her voice and remain cool-headed.
“I . . . I can’t. I’m sorry . . .”
Ashley refused to take no for an answer. Surprising her mother by flying home for Christmas was too important. “I understand getting a ticket to Seattle three days before Christmas is pushing my luck,” she said, doing her best to appear calm and composed. “If I’d been able to book a seat sooner, I would have. Getting Christmas off from work was a complete surprise. I attend graduate school and I also work at a diner. I hated to miss the holidays with my mother, but I didn’t have any choice. She’s a widow and my brother lives in Texas and can’t get home for Christmas, so there’s only me.” Perhaps if the reservation clerk knew her story, she might reconsider the can’t sell you a ticket part of this discussion.
“Then my boss decided to close the diner between Christmas and New Year’s for renovations after the refrigeration unit broke, and then he thought he may as well get a new deep fryer, too, so it just made sense to close down. All this happened at the very last minute, and because he felt so bad he gave me a Christmas bonus so I could fly home.”
“I’m so sorry . . .” Stephanie said again, looking nervous. “If you’d kindly move aside and wait a few minutes.”
“I haven’t seen my mother since last August,” Ashley continued, refusing to give up easily. “I wanted to surprise her. It would mean the world to both of us to be together over the holidays. Would you please look again? I’ll take any seat, any time of the day or night.”
Stephanie didn’t so much as glance down at her computer screen with even a pretense of trying to accommodate her. “I can’t . . . I wish I could, but I can’t.”
Ashley couldn’t help wonder what was up with this can’t business. That made it all the more nonsensical.
“You can’t,” she repeated. “There must be more of an explanation than that. It just doesn’t make sense.”
The reservation clerk frowned. Her eyes roamed about the area as if she was looking for someone. That, too, was irritating. It was as if she was seeking a replacement or someone to rescue her.
“I believe you have your answer,” the man behind her in line said impatiently. He shifted from one foot to the other, letting Ashley know he didn’t appreciate her arguing with the clerk.
Ashley whirled around and confronted him face-to-face. “In case anyone forgot to mention it, this is Christmas. How about a little peace on earth and goodwill toward men? Be patient. I’ll be finished as soon as possible and then you can talk to Stephanie, but for now it’s my turn.”
In response, he rolled his eyes.
Ashley returned her attention to the woman at the counter. “If you can’t find me a seat on a plane to Seattle, I’d be willing to fly standby.”
Stephanie shook her head.
“All the flights to Seattle are already booked?” The man next in line blurted out the question.
Stephanie’s eyes widened as if she, too, was surprised he’d jumped into their conversation. “I . . . didn’t say that. I’ll speak to you directly in just a moment,” she said.
“Excuse me?” Ashley flared, forgetting her resolve to remain calm and collected. This was too much. With her hands on her hips, she stared down at the other woman. “This is discrimination. Just because he’s a man and good-looking you can dredge up a seat for him, but not for me?” This was gender discrimination. Where was a television crew when you needed one? This would make a juicy piece for the six-o’clock news.
Seeing that the line was getting long and the Grinch behind her wasn’t the only one with a short fuse, Ashley decided to drop the entire matter.
“Okay, fine, have it your way, but I think this is just plain wrong.” With that, she grabbed hold of her suitcase and with all the dignity she could muster started to walk away, feeling more stressed with each step.
“Miss, miss,” the airline employee called after her. “If you’d kindly wait a few minutes I’m sure we could resolve this.”
“No way,” Ashley refused. “As you’ve repeatedly said, you can’t sell me a ticket.” With that, she headed out of the airport with her dignity in shreds.
Ashley hadn’t expected it would be easy to catch a last-minute flight. She’d already tried to find an available seat online, without luck. For reasons she couldn’t understand she kept getting booted off the website. That was the reason she’d decided to come directly to the airport and try her chances there.
Naturally, flying home was her first option. But other modes of transportation were also possibilities. She could always try the bus or travel by train, if there was even one scheduled. The most expedient way to make the trip would be to drive. Unfortunately, her fifteen-year-old hand-me-down car wasn’t in the best of shape and she was afraid of it breaking down along the way. To top it off, snow was predicted. Under normal circumstances, snow close to Christmas would be ideal, but not in an aging vehicle. If she could afford . . .
Ashley stopped mid-step. Why hadn’t she thought of this earlier? She could always rent a car! The solution was right in front of her, the answer obvious. She should have thought about it long before now. And really there was no better place to rent a car than in an airport.
Perfect.
Reversing direction, Ashley headed toward the car rental agencies, traveling down the escalator, rolling her suitcase behind her. When she reached the rental area, all of the agencies displayed signs that stated all their cars had been rented. All but one. Ashley made her way to that counter.
The longer she waited in line, the more she fumed about the airline clerk who’d insisted she couldn’t sell her a seat. The nerve. And then to basically reassure the man in line behind her that there were seats available. That was discrimination of the worst kind, even if the guy was eye candy. Stephanie was clearly looking to do him a favor, which only served to irritate Ashley further. Truth be told, she’d noticed him, too. Hard not to, really. He was tall and stood with military precision, his dark appearance lean and strong. She suspected he was either military or former military. He gave that impression.
The line for the car rental agency slowly crept forward. As luck would have it, the very man who’d been so annoying at the airline counter came to stand behind her again.
It gave Ashley satisfaction to see he hadn’t been any more successful with Stephanie in obtaining a seat than she had.
“So Stephanie couldn’t sell you a seat, either,” she said, trying hard not to gloat.
“All she had available was standby,” he grumbled, fingering his cell.
Ashley would have gladly accepted a chance for a standby flight. It wouldn’t have mattered how long she had to wait. “Not good enough for you, I suppose.”
He glanced her way and frowned, his look darkening. “I can’t take the chance. I need to be in Seattle.”
“I do, too,” she insisted. “It’s almost Christmas.”
“This is for a job interview.”
“A job?” Ashley echoed. “And you have to be there right before Christmas?”
Instead of answering, he returned his attention to his phone, frowning once again. Apparently he wasn’t interested in making conversation with her. Fine. Whatever. That being the case, she wasn’t interested in talking to him, either. Read more
Dashing Through the Snow, Reading Guide
1. While stationed in Afghanistan, Dash lamented the Christmases spent away from home and loved ones, but said everyone made the best of the situation. Have circumstances ever taken you or someone you love away for the holidays and if so, how did you make the most of it? What did you come to realize is important as a result? Did the experience actually enable you to create new traditions, make new friends or steer you in a surprising direction?
2. Ashley felt guilty leaving her mom to pursue her own dreams after her dad died, knowing how lonely she was. Do you agree with Dash that sometimes, we need to let go of the ones we love most in order to help them pave their own way and force them outside their comfort zone? Have you ever had to do that for someone or for yourself? What did you learn as a result?
3. Ashley tells Dash that she can’t walk away from the puppy, Little Blade, because he chose her. But Dash doesn’t seem to understand what she means by that. Have you ever experienced an overwhelming and instant loyalty to an animal or friend because they selected you? How does that bond form and why is it so special?
4. Have you ever had a holiday traveling (or other) debacle that turned out to be just as humorous, or fortuitous, as Ashley and Dash’s in the end? Like Dash, did events end on a note that you wouldn’t change a thing in spite of veering off-course?
5. Ashley and Dash are two very different, very stubborn people. What were your favorite moments in which one or the other had to bite the bullet and admit defeat? What happens over the course of their trip that eventually enables them to bend, compromise and let down their guards? What truths do they force each other to face about themselves along the way? Have you ever met a stranger in such a serendipitous way who turned out to be a great friend? Do you believe those chance encounters are the result of fate or coincidence?
6. Dash and Ashley’s journey unfolds in conjunction with Agent Jordan Wilkes’s manhunt. How did that shape the reading experience for you? What do you make of Wilkes’s obsession with taking Ashley Davison out, even at the expense of spending time with his family on Christmas? Is it dangerous to be so intent on securing a mission that one actually becomes blind to not only what really matters, but the truth itself? Have you ever gotten similarly fixated on a thing that you were influenced by what you wanted to believe rather than what was?
7. Ashley says one of the most regrettable parts of her father’s premature death is that he didn’t get to accomplish his retirement plans to buy a motor home and travel. Do you think people have a tendency to deter their dreams too long, until retirement or some other “right moment,” which may never come? What are some of your own goals and how might you accomplish them, even if they’re inconvenient or there’s an obstacle blocking your way?
8. At first, Ashley and Dash convince themselves that they can’t be together because they don’t need any distractions in their busy lives. Should distance or demanding schedules be considered impossibilities when it comes to true love? What are the real reasons they’re both gun-shy when it comes to starting a new relationship? What is it that makes this thing between them so different and worth the risk?
9. Ashley asks herself – and her mother – if it’s possible to fall in love with someone in two days. In your opinion, is it? Do you think Ashley and Dash’s feelings would have been as intense if they hadn’t been forced into this unconventional getting-to-know-you period, or is it just one of those cases where when you know, you know? Is there anyone in your own life who’s fallen in love instantaneously and what were the circumstances that brought it about?
10. If you could take a spontaneous road trip with anyone, who would it be? Could you see yourself agreeing to share a ride with someone you just met at an airport? Share your most interesting story about a person you met while traveling.
“This Christmas romance from [Debbie] Macomber is both sweet and sincere.”—Library Journal
“Quirky heroine Ashley brings the laughs and is the driving force behind this hilarious read, while Dash brings a sense of groundedness with his stable military persona. There’s just the right amount of holiday cheer to remind you it’s Christmas. Ashley and Dash are a realistic example of how opposites attract. This road-trip romance is full of high jinks and the kooky characters Macomber does so well.”—RT Book Reviews
The Parkersburg News & Sentinel (Virginia) calls DASHING THROUGH THE SNOW “heartwarming…this a fun and charming story of romance with some holiday spirit.”
To Dan and Mary Wolgemuth, who understand the Reason for the Season.
