Her Highland Fling (4 page)

Read Her Highland Fling Online

Authors: Jennifer McQuiston

BOOK: Her Highland Fling
11.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Lead the way, MacKenzie.”

He chuckled, making her stomach somersault once more as he gestured toward the door. “Ach, lass, don’t you think you might call me ‘William’? After all, a man who’s paid for your drinks might have earned the privilege, aye?”

C
HAPTER
T
HREE

I
n Brighton, the night skies of her childhood had carried the reflection of the moon off the water and the faint echoes of a thousand candles and oil lamps. During her brief time in London, the night had blazed nearly as bright as day, the sky obscured by smoke and smog and the sidewalks shimmering in gaslight shadows.

But in Scotland, it seemed the night sky turned itself over to the stars.

It was still warm, but with the night air came a mixture of scents she had missed when she first arrived. Sharp pine and mellow heather. The coastal tang of the breeze coming from the west. And beneath it all, growing stronger now as Pen picked her way along the dark path, the dusky scent of water and bogs and lurking animal life.

“Almost there,” MacKenzie murmured over his shoulder. “Quietly now. They startle easy.”

She smiled into the darkness, given that the idea of mythical creatures startling anyone was a bit of a lark. She had come down here for a reason, and she hoped the experience of her first real kiss—with a gentleman not obligated as a result of a parlor game—was a duly memorable one.

Pen tilted her face up, nearly as mesmerized by the spangled sky as the whisky-rich sound of MacKenzie’s voice. How far had they come? A half mile, perhaps, but it felt as though they had gone straight down the side of a cliff, picking their way over rocks and roots alike. She’d been forced to grab his hand on more than one occasion. It had been necessary, that last grab, when her fingers had lingered over his. She refused to entertain the idea that perhaps she had reached for his hand for less than required reasons.

She felt no hesitation, only a breathless anticipation that made everything seem more acute. Even when her feet tripped over unseen objects, she was not afraid. Her Highlander might be a bit dim, but he was also big and powerful, and she had no doubts at all he would protect her.

They emerged from the steep path and stepped out into a clearing, and that was when she heard a low, unearthly moan that sent her heart pounding in a sudden gust of fear.

He held up a hand, halting their progress.

“MacKenzie?” she whispered. “What was that?”

His only answer was a sharp, high-pitched whistle.

The bellow came again, followed by a distant splashing. The moon shone down on the surface of the loch like a bonfire, and in its light she caught a ghastly shadow.

Her hand came up to catch her gasp of terror. She hadn’t believed him, back at the tavern. She’d thought this little more than folktale, the sort of yarn spun to convince young ladies to sneak out for a moonlit kiss. Not that she had needed much convincing.

But as something lumbered ashore in the darkness, she realized she was more than halfway to believing him now.

She leaped forward like a startled rabbit, plastering herself against MacKenzie’s solid back and all but mounting him in a tangle of skirts. “What
is
that?” she hissed.

He chuckled, and she could feel the movement of his big body through every inch of her front, pressed against him as she was. “Crodh mara,” he whispered. “As I told you.”

“But . . . they are mythical c-creatures,” she protested, praying it was true.

But
something
was out there.

And that something was making its way toward them.

He put a steadying hand on her waist. “Easy, lass. They can smell fear.”

And oh, merciful heavens, she could smell
them
, a musty, waterlogged scent that made her want to wrinkle her nose. She peered around his shoulder in a panic. Along the shoreline, something else moved.

Something big and terrifying and coming her way.

They are not real
, she told herself fiercely.
He only brought you down here for a kiss
.

But the moan came again, closer now, and deep and soul shaking.

“I want to go b-back, please.” She buried her face in the expanse of his back, the linen of his shirt scraping against her goose-pebbled skin. “Take me back.”

“Aye. Soon. But if you don’t greet them, they’ll only follow you up the hill.” He pulled her around to his side. His fingers curled where they made contact with her waist, and she could feel his calm strength through the thin fabric. “Better, I think, to face them, now that you’ve come this far.”

She willed herself to trust in the steadying hand that hovered near her hip.

She drew a shuddering breath and looked up.

Oh, God. They looked like nothing she had ever seen before, in books or otherwise. Certainly, nothing like this shaggy, waterlogged creature had ever washed up on the shores of Brighton. In the moonlight, it seemed the size of a London omnibus, with horns longer than a man’s leg.

“Some say the crodh mara are fairies,” MacKenzie said, his voice deep and strangely hypnotic, though whether it was fashioned to render her or the creatures frozen, she couldn’t be sure. “But I’ve always had a more practical view of the beasts.”

One of the dark, lumbering creatures came closer. MacKenzie held out his hand, as though he held heaven and earth in it. The thing butted its huge head against the outstretched palm, knocking them both off balance. Pen squeaked in fear and surprise.

“And of course,” he chuckled, “they like a wee bit of sugar.”

He loosened his hold on her, one hand digging in his trouser pocket, and then, as she watched in mute fear and wonder, he stretched his hand out again, a biscuit in his palm.

The creature took it with a delicate swipe of its tongue.

“They’re . . . real?” Pen whispered, growing braver now. Any creature who liked biscuits was one she could perhaps comprehend. She looked up at MacKenzie, her eyes searching his. “I d-don’t understand.”

“Every legend is anchored in fact, aye?” He handed her another biscuit, dug from the depths of his pocket. “These are a breed of cattle unique to the Highlands.
Kyloe
, we call them. These are my personal breeding stock.” He rubbed an affectionate hand on the creature’s nose.

Pen stared at him, incredulous. “You brought me here to show me your c-cattle?”

“My
water
cattle.” In the moonlight, she could see the flash of his teeth. “They are great hairy beasts, and so they spend a good deal of time in the water on hot summer days, only coming out at night.”

Her heart was still pounding like a hammer in her chest, but more in wonder now than fear. Her natural curiosity began to overcome her surprise. “Can I touch them?” she asked. At his nod, Pen slowly reached out her palm. She’d seen cattle before, of course. They littered the Sussex countryside and were driven into Brighton on market days. But those cattle had looked nothing like this shaggy, dripping beast.

She felt the roughened swipe of its tongue. The warm breath and slick surface of its nose.

And then her hand was licked clean, and she was laughing in delight.

More inquisitive bodies crowded in. It seemed MacKenzie had brought biscuits enough for them all. Seemed, as well, as though he did this with some regularity. He called them by name, soft Gaelic words she didn’t understand but that made her heart thump louder and that obviously meant something to the eager creatures.

Oighrig. Cadha. Beathas. Caileach.

She took care to keep her feet out of reach of their milling, sharp hooves, watching more than participating. And then finally, his pockets were emptied.

“I think we are safe enough to go now.” He wiped his hands on his trousers as the cattle began to lumber away. “Once they’ve had their treat, they are usually content to let me leave.” He gestured to the steep hillside. “The path is just there.”

Pen’s cheeks warmed. “Must we g-go quite yet?”

He smiled down at her, shadowed by moonlight. “Waiting for a water dragon, then?” She felt the air stir as he stepped nearer, and his low, earthy chuckle brushed tantalizingly against her ears. “Or perhaps a
brollachan
?”

Her knees quivered at the sound of the unfamiliar word. “What is a brollachan?”

“A shapeless creature of the night.”

Pen’s gaze swept down his moon-soaked frame, and a shiver snaked its way up her spine. She was a journalist. A manipulator of words. And “shapeless” was not a word she would ever reach for to describe William MacKenzie.

In his plaid, he had been fiercely magnificent.

In moonlight, he was devastating.

“I j-just want to enjoy the moment,” she whispered. “The n-night is lovely, after all.” She flushed to hear her stammer was worsening, but there was no denying she felt anything but calm and serene. She had come down here for a reason, and despite the beauty of the surprise he’d offered her, that reason had not yet been realized. “Did you really just bring me here to see your c-cattle?” she blurted out.

Dark eyes glittered down at her, nearly handsome in their unswerving focus. “I thought you might like to write about them. They are part of what make the Highlands special.” He paused. “Why? What else did you hope to see, Miss Tolbertson? I would be happy to show you anything you wish during your time here.”

“I p-prefer to explore on my own.” It was said before Pen had time to think. Though it was the truth, she regretted her haste. She could think of worse ways to spend her days in Moraig than strolling the picturesque streets on this man’s very muscular arm.

“Aye. I’ve noticed,” he said with a tight smile. “But you might consider using a guide. There is a good deal of history in the town, and we want you to have a favorable impression, after all.”

Pen swallowed. In truth, her impression was improving with every passing second, and not only of Moraig. She thought of how this man’s body had felt pressed against hers, when she had thrown herself against him. Safe and disturbing, all at once. But he seemed to have no intention of kissing her. And why would he? The buxom serving girl in the Gander had offered him far more than a kiss, and
she
didn’t have a stammer.

Worse, he had brought her here, shown her these mysterious, moon-soaked creatures, only because he imagined she would want to write about it. And she should.

She
would.

But for Pen, it was a night of firsts, and she couldn’t see ending it without reaching for the experience she most desired. And after all, he’d just offered to show her anything she wished.

She stepped forward, going up on her toes, and fisted her hands in his shirt. Her lips bumped against his. And then she threw herself into her very first kiss.

He stilled, as though wrapping his head around what she was offering.

Dim as a rock
, she thought, closing her eyes. How could he not see what she wanted?

But then his arms came up around her, and that was when her thoughts became muddled. Because the kiss she had sought—the kiss she had taken, really—shifted into something no longer under her control. She was pulled against his chest with a solid, welcome thump, and then his mouth moved over hers, murmuring in a soft brogue that made no sense but turned her into little more than a quiver.

And his kiss . . . He might be a bit dull about the edges, but in this area he was proving well educated. It was clear the man knew how to kiss a woman properly. It was impossible to do it justice with mere words. She turned herself over to the sheer feel of it. Every sense she possessed—and some she hadn’t realized she had—felt plundered by the contact of his mouth on hers. Stripped bare.

Reformed in the shape of this moment.

He tasted of Scotland: dark and smoky, heat and salt. The scrape of his whiskered jaw and the solid strength in his body made her hum with an unspoken awareness.

She kissed him blindly, her arms stretching up around his neck, body arching against his in an invitation she didn’t even understand. And oh, dear heavens, how he kissed her back. His hands came up, tilting her face up to meet his mouth more fully. His tongue swept against hers, sure and swift and tasting of whisky, and she whimpered in welcome, unable to articulate how perfect it felt.

But the sound seemed to mean something different to him, and he broke away, panting.

“Christ above, lass.” His hands loosened, falling away. “I dinna mean to take such advantage of you.” His voice seemed to crack at the edges. “I need you, you see.”

Her breath caught in her throat. “You . . . need me?”

“Aye.” He pulled a hand across his mouth, as though the taste of her still lingered there. “That is, Moraig needs you. I would offer you an apology.” He shook his head. “I’ll not have you thinking all Highlanders behave this way.”

Pen didn’t know whether to laugh or moan in embarrassment. Because merciful heavens, if all Highlanders kissed this way, she was
never
going back to London.

If he chose to take the blame for the impropriety, she supposed she should be grateful, but part of her wanted only to press her lips against his again and see where this might lead.

“Think nothing of it, MacKenzie,” she forced herself to say. “C-consider it a bit of research. Nothing more.”

His brow tipped down. “Research?”

She nodded, already taking a step toward the path that would carry her floating feet back to the Blue Gander. “Like the whisky.”

She left him then, scurrying up the steep hillside. Left him looking as big and confused as he had this afternoon at the posting house, but this time she couldn’t help but smile at the thought. Her head was buzzing with all the glorious contradictions inherent in a kiss of this sort.

No
, they should not have done it.

Yes
, she wanted to do it again, and despite his gallantry, she suspected he did, too.

And
maybe
. . . just maybe, there was more to research than whisky on this trip.

C
HAPTER
F
OUR

“S
he thinks I’m an idiot.” William gave vent to the past two days of frustration, pounding a nail into the wood with a ferocity that would have no doubt served his ancestors well in battle.

Other books

A Picture-Perfect Mess by Jill Santopolo
Mortal Remains by Margaret Yorke
Bhowani Junction by John Masters
Redemption by Miles, Amy
My Wolf's Bane by Veronica Blade
The Shortest Journey by Hazel Holt