Read Edwina and the Seven Snowed-in Scientists Online
Authors: Rachel Clark
horizon, things were going to get nasty very quickly.
If they’d still been in the helicopter, the storm would’ve caused
some serious concerns for Edwina on the return trip to the base, and
because of that detail, Jake couldn’t quite shake the feeling that
Edwina was the target. Granted his family had a few unusual
secrets—what family didn’t?—but they weren’t the type of secrets
that would get them killed. No, it was more likely their foul-mouthed companion had an enemy without even knowing it.
Talking about foul-mouthed…
“Edwina! Shut up!” Kieran yelled over the wind.
“Why?” she asked, sounding like a child who was pouting, but at
least she stopped swearing and throwing unfounded accusations at
him and his brother.
“Because it’s time to choose which one of us you want to sleep
with,” Kieran said without a trace of humor.
“Ch–choose,” she stuttered as if she had no clue what subject they
were on.
“Yes, Eddie,” Kieran said, emphasizing the shortened version of
her name, “which one of us is going to get the pleasure of your oh-so-sweet company?”
Wow. First his temper, and now sarcasm. The woman sure got
under his brother’s skin.
And the woman seemed lost for words. Another incredible first.
Enjoying the tension between his two companions a little too
much considering the circumstances, Jake finally moved to intervene.
“Edwina, you can sleep with me.” He held up his hands in surrender
when she turned on him. She was practically lost inside his snow coat, but somehow she managed to convey just how pissed off she was
with a single look.
“Where is my bivvy bag? It was stowed with the rest of the
equipment? Why didn’t you grab it?”
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“Because it was covered in some type of glue like everything
else,” Kieran said, sounding completely worn down by her constantly
argumentative stance. Obviously completely out of patience, Kieran
took the coat off Edwina, threw it to Jake and pointed at the bivvy
bags. “Get in or freeze to death.”
Edwina must’ve finally realized how serious his brother was
because she slid into the bag nearest them without even asking whose
bag was whose. Jake laughed quietly as Kieran rolled his eyes, took
one last look at the approaching storm, and headed for his bivvy bag.
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Chapter Two
Edwina shivered as the temperature seemed to drop even more. At
least she was out of the wind. But now that she wasn’t yelling at
them, the adrenaline in her system was dropping, and she was feeling
the cold even more. She shivered as someone climbed into the bag
beside her and zipped the top closed. It was a tight fit—this sleeping bag cross dome tent was only meant for one person—so she wriggled
as far as she could to the side without tipping the thing over and
prayed that these guys knew what they were doing.
She didn’t realize her teeth were chattering until a gruff voice
said, “Come here,” a moment before she was pulled against a solid,
warm chest and engulfed inside a snow coat.
Amazed at how warm the man felt, considering they’d just spent a
couple of hours in the wind and snow on this ice cube of death,
Edwina snuggled closer, not really caring which brother she was
cuddled up to but fairly certain it was Kieran. A fifty-fifty chance of getting the wrong bivvy bag and she had to choose the one belonging
to the brother who hated her.
Of course, she hadn’t really given him much reason to actually
like her. She’d been pissed off at her boss for sending her, then
seriously annoyed at crashing her helicopter—a first for her—and
then terrified that she was traveling with two men it seemed someone
was trying to kill. Collateral damage was not the way she’d expected
to go out of this life.
“Take your jacket off,” he said as he helped her to do just that.
She didn’t really have time to protest because the first touch of his warmth against her back without the bulky jacket in the way was
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21
complete and total heaven. The man was like her own personal
electric blanket, and she sighed and relaxed against him.
Her jaw ached but at least her teeth had stopped clicking together,
and she snuggled closer, wishing she could turn and bury her cold
face in the warmth of Kieran’s chest. He must’ve been wearing some
fabulous heat retaining material because she was sure she could feel
the sculpted planes of his chest and abdomen through the thin
clothing.
“I’m sorry,” she managed to whisper as she finally stopped
shivering.
“I know you’re scared,” he said, cutting right to the heart of the
matter. She wanted to protest that she wasn’t scared just majorly
pissed off, but considering that Kieran had already seen through her brave front, she decided to let it go. For now. “We’ll take care of you, Edwina. You just have to trust us.”
She nodded. She didn’t really have any choice but to trust them.
With her chopper down, her radio dead, and all of her emergency
equipment sabotaged, she would not have survived this long without
them. Well, she might have if she’d stayed with the wreck of her
helicopter, but if someone was trying to kill her, then sitting and waiting for them to show up seemed really stupid.
Was somebody trying to kill her?
Granted, she hadn’t exactly been pleasant company in the last
three months. And she certainly hadn’t gone out of her way to make
friends. Almost from the moment she’d stepped onto Antarctica,
she’d regretted her decision to come here. She never had any intention of coming back, so she hadn’t bothered to try and make lifelong-bestest-buddies with the rest of the personnel on the Mawson base.
She quickly ran a list of her workmates through her head and
realized with a small jolt that she really didn’t know anyone well
enough to cross them off as suspects.
But being unfriendly certainly wasn’t a reason to kill her. She was
due to go home in two days. That alone should have negated the need
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for someone to want her dead. Why commit a crime when the
problem would resolve itself?
She snuggled closer to Kieran and realized that it had been nearly
a year since she’d let anyone touch her. She’d almost forgotten the feeling of peace a cuddle could bring, and it felt like the first time she’d been truly warm in months. How ironic that she was in the
middle of nowhere with a storm approaching snuggled up to a guy
who didn’t actually like her.
Edwina tried to shake off the melancholy and get back to the
matter at hand. Chances were that the base would send a rescue crew
soon after she didn’t return from her flight. They’d probably be
delayed by the storm, but Edwina had followed all the protocols so
that everyone who needed to know knew where she was. Well, sort
of.
“Was the GPS functioning properly?” she asked suddenly as an
awful suspicion clanged in her head. “Is it possible someone
sabotaged that as well?” She could feel adrenaline starting to pound through her once more.
“I don’t know,” Kieran said quietly. “It’s certainly possible for a
GPS to malfunction.”
“What if we’re nowhere near where we’re supposed to be?” Panic
crawled over her. How would rescue teams find them? It was almost
mid-February. Soon the weather would get so bad that most of the
personnel left the base and didn’t come back until October. She’d be
stuck here. Hysteria bubbled up her throat as she realized that their emergency supplies would only last a few days anyway. Fucking hell,
she was going to be one of those frozen corpses they find perfectly
preserved years later.
“Shhh,” Kieran said as he rolled her over in his arms and pressed
her face against his warm chest. “Jake and I know this area well. Even if we went off course, we’ll be able to find a way to the nearest
permanent shelter.”
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“Really?” she asked. It wasn’t that she doubted his word, but
rather that she wasn’t certain she’d heard him correctly. In times of stress the brain played tricks on people—she’d read that
somewhere—so she could simply be hearing what she wanted to hear
and not what he was actually saying.
She felt him wriggle a bit and realized he was yanking one of his
gloves off with his teeth. A moment later strong, warm fingers slid
through her hair and caressed her temple. She leaned into the touch
like a flower to sunshine. How on Earth was he so incredibly warm?
“Get some sleep,” he said in a soothing voice.
* * * *
Jake wandered the area, looking for familiar landmarks, until the
wind and snow cut visibility to practically nil, and he retreated back to their emergency shelter. The trouble with this part of the world was
that quite often one area looked nearly identical to another. They’d
have to explore thoroughly before they could figure out where they
were. It was possible his brothers would come to find them, but with
the storm closing in he refused to hold out that hope at the moment.
They’d hunker down for the duration of the storm and hope things
were clearer when it passed. He made it back to their sleeping bags,
relieved to find all seemed quiet in Kieran’s bivvy bag. Hell, half of him had expected the bag to be alive with movement as Edwina
fought Kieran’s attempts to keep her warm.
Of course, the current peace and quiet didn’t discount the
possibility that Kieran had smothered the woman out of frustration.
“Everything okay?” Jake asked, hunkering close to the small
ventilation opening.
“Fine,” Kieran said quietly. “She’s asleep. Did you find
anything?”
“Nope,” he answered, not trying to hide his own frustration.
Kieran would’ve realized by now that they hadn’t been anywhere near
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the course they were supposed to have been on, so there was no need
to sugarcoat his words.
“Get some sleep,” Kieran said in his bossiest older brother voice.
Jake rolled his eyes, yet was unable to think of any reason not to
follow his brother’s order, so he climbed into his bivvy bag and
zipped it closed. It felt good to be out of the wind, but he was itching to search the area so that they could find a way to more permanent
shelter.
“As soon as the storm passes,” Kieran said through the bag vents,
“you can babysit the princess, and I’ll find out where we are.”
Jake knew his brother well enough to know that he was beginning
to care for Edwina, despite her prickly personality, but also that
Kieran disliked that he was beginning to care for a woman at all more than the actual caring for Edwina. Hell, with thought processes like that, Jake was starting to wonder if his brother was the only one
Edwina threw off balance.
The wind chose that moment to double in strength, and the noise
made communication without shouting impossible. Since neither of
them really wanted to wake Edwina, they fell to silence. Jake knew
that his brother would stay awake, so decided to follow instructions and get some sleep.
* * * *
Kieran held the most annoying woman he’d ever met close to his
chest. He could feel the caress of her warm breath through the thin
material of his thermal vest, and he found himself wondering why this one would affect him so much. It wasn’t like he’d been a monk. His
life in the last few years had been rather adventurous, but of course he’d found this irritating and intriguing woman at a time when he had no opportunity, or even the will, to explore the connection further.
It wasn’t until a particularly strong blast of wind rocked the small
dome above him that he realized that she might be with them a lot
longer than a few hours or even days. It was quite possible that
Edwina would need to stay with them until the summer months
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allowed them to move about more freely. In fact, with someone trying
to kill her, maybe he should be thinking about hiding her until they could figure out exactly what was going on.
She was completely relaxed in his arms, even snoring softly, and
he found himself wondering how long it had been since she’d had a
decent night’s sleep. Considering the current circumstances, he could only guess that she hadn’t felt warm for a long time, and it was his body heat that finally helped her to relax.
Kieran shook his head sharply, tired of his ridiculous thoughts.
The woman, by her own admission, hated the cold. He planned to live
and work in the Antarctic for at least the next three years, so there was no middle ground. Even if she was around long enough to explore the
strange attraction he felt growing for her, she would never, ever
consider living his lifestyle.
And then of course, there was his family. It took a special woman
to deal with the way they lived, and it was the specific reason he’d never encouraged more than brief flings with the women he’d been
involved with.