Howl for a Highlander

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Howl for a Highlander Page 9

by Terry Spear


  She also had sounded worried—not for herself as much as for him.

  He ground his teeth, then pulled his phone out and called her again. As soon as she answered, he asked, “Is he alone?”

  “No. Which is why I said to wait to come and get me when I’m through here.”

  She didn’t say who he had been with and her voice was still hushed, which made Duncan believe the bastard was still nearby, possibly listening in. “Okay. A guard with him?”

  “No.”

  “A woman?” he asked, sounding really surprised. How could Silverman have been hitting on Shelley if he had a woman with him? Duncan suspected the woman wasn’t his mother.

  “Yes.”

  “Young? Girlfriend?” Duncan asked.

  “Yes.”

  Duncan cursed in Gaelic.

  “I love the sound of the words you just spoke, but I’m guessing they weren’t love sentiments.”

  He gave a dark smile. “I’m coming for you. Just continue your work, and when I arrive, I’ll call you and locate you.”

  “I can’t dissuade you?”

  “No. This man has too much to lose. He could be capable of anything. For your information, we’re going on the dinner cruise, so you can’t go out for drinks with him tonight or any other.”

  He heard her take in a deep breath. “Who’s paying?” she asked.

  He smiled. “I’m sure my brother, Ian, will understand that this is a necessary expense. I’ll see you momentarily.” He hung up, hating that she was alone in the forest with no protection whatsoever, and drove even faster.

  He still couldn’t believe the she-wolf had run into his quarry while doing her job which had nothing to do with his job. He saw no sign of Sal Silverman when he parked the car at the trailhead, but he smelled the bastard as soon as he left the vehicle. At least he assumed it was the bastard’s scent, male wolf, and no other like it in the area.

  He quickly locked the vehicle and strode down the trail, wondering just what he’d do if he ran into Silverman. He’d like to wring the crook’s neck, but he had to get the clan’s money out of him first. Then he’d wring his neck.

  He’d stalked along what seemed an hour’s worth of trail when he spied Shelley crouching in front of a flower, camera angled to take a shot. He paused, not wanting to disturb her work. When she was done, she lifted her nose a little, turned suddenly, and nearly fell on her butt when she saw him watching her.

  He strode toward her and helped her up. He hadn’t meant to do anything more than that, but she threw herself into his arms. One hand still clutched a notepad and pen, while the other was clinging to her camera. Both arms wrapped around him in a lover’s embrace, her breasts pressed hard against his chest, and instantly he was aroused.

  “I thought you said you didn’t want to see me this soon,” he whispered into her hair, kissing her on top of her head, hugging her tight, and loving her exuberance, but suspecting she’d worried about his safety more than her own.

  With her face buried against his chest, she shook her head. “I had too much work to do,” she whispered back.

  “Liar,” he said, his voice still hushed as he separated from her and looked into her large, green, very worried eyes. “You didn’t want me killing the bastard in this special place of yours.”

  She choked back a little laugh, tears welling up in her eyes. “You’re right. So are you going to tell me what you said in Gaelic over the phone?”

  “Nay, lass. It isn’t something your tender ears should hear.”

  She smiled at him. “I’m sure I’ve heard it all. Are you certain you don’t want me to have drinks with him?”

  “Aye, I’m certain.” He gave her whole body a tight squeeze. “Are you done here?”

  “No, but you can keep me company. Protect me from anything or anyone while you’re at it.”

  He snorted and released her. “I came to take you away from here.”

  “I know,” she said. She looped her arm around his, since both her hands were full, and tugged him to stroll with her. “I said I wasn’t done. He’s not here any longer. If you don’t want to be here with me, it’s all right with me, although it’s really nice having you here while I’m working.”

  He frowned down at her but noted she was serious.

  She continued, “If you want me to help with your mission, I’d be willing to do it. It affects me personally, too.”

  “I’m not willing. It’s too dangerous.”

  “Even for the money?” She eyed him speculatively.

  “Even for all the money in the world.” He was serious about that.

  “All right, but you can’t say I didn’t offer.” She stopped at another tree and said, “It’s a giraffe tree. See its winding, odd shape?” Then she snapped another picture. “If I’d needed your rescue, you could have swung through the trees, hanging onto the vines like Tarzan, and swooped down to take me with you into the canopy.”

  “Ah, lass, now what would a Highlander be doing swinging from vines in trees like an ape man? I would be riding my horse, swinging a claymore at yonder enemy, and then I’d slip you into my saddle and ride off with you.”

  “Into the sunset.”

  He laughed. “Aye, into the sunset.”

  After moving only a couple of inches, she bent down and took several more pictures. He let out his breath hard. “They all look the same. Why are you taking a picture of every leaf in the forest?”

  She laughed. “What if I were to say all swords look the same to me? They have a handle and a blade.”

  He smiled.

  “See, so they’re not all the same.” With that, she continued to take pictures until the filtered light that managed to sift through the trees began to fade.

  “We’ll miss our dinner excursion if we don’t hurry,” he finally said.

  “Were you serious about that?” She quickly pocketed her camera and notebook in her backpack, grabbed his hand, and rushed him to the parking area.

  “Of course I’m serious. If Silverman investigates, he’ll find you did go out on a dinner cruise at 5:30. I made reservations on the way over here.”

  “You should have mentioned it to me earlier. Hurry or we’ll miss the sailboat.”

  He laughed and hauled her toward the parking lot even faster.

  They were soon on their way to the boat dock at the water sports center on Seven Mile Beach where they’d pick up the catamaran. He looked forward to wining and dining the wolf on the waves.

  She combed her fingers through her breeze-tangled hair and peered into the visor mirror. “I hope I’m dressed all right in capris, tennis shoes, and this shirt.”

  He glanced at the stretchy peach fabric of the tank top molding to her breasts, only partially hidden by the green leafy shirt she wore over it, and shook his head. No wonder Silverman was interested. “You look good in anything you wear. Too good.”

  “That’s not what I mean.”

  “It’s a catamaran cruise. It can’t be too dressy. You’re fine. Hell, better than fine.”

  She smiled. “You know the right words, but if I see all the women wearing dresses…” She pulled off her backpack, dug out a band, and tied her hair back in a ponytail. “How long is the dinner cruise?”

  “Three and half hours. I’ll have you home and in bed sometime after nine tonight.”

  She chewed on her bottom lip, not sure where this was going. Did he mean they were going to share a bed? She really didn’t want to ask. If he did want to share the big bed with her, she was already game. She supposed the reason she had changed her mind was that he had been so gallant in coming to her rescue. Not to mention that he was taking her on a dinner cruise tonight. But it was more than that. She really didn’t want the night with him to end.

  “I guess I’d better call Silverman and tell him I’ll be tied up all night.”

  “As much as I hate that you have to say another word to him…” Duncan cast her a dark look. “Maybe you shouldn’t call him. Just leave him ha
nging.”

  She shook her head. “I’m never that rude. Even if the guy is a Class A crook. Maybe we should think up a code so that if I run into him again when you’re not around, I can give you a call and you’ll know what’s up.”

  Duncan scowled at that.

  “Ignoring the possibility that it might happen again won’t make it go away. If I had given you the code word that said Silverman was on his way down the path coming toward me, you might have called me back faster.”

  Duncan seemed to ponder that.

  She raised her brows. “Well, I couldn’t come up with anything else that fit what I was doing at the time. I can’t help it if you thought I was crazy.”

  He smiled a little.

  She harrumphed. “So you did think I was crazy. That’s why we need a code.” She pulled her phone and Silverman’s card out of her pack, then flipped the card over to get his number off the back. The drinks engagement hadn’t been until seven, so she still had time to beg off. She really didn’t want to have to talk to the creep again.

  “Hello, um, Sal?” she said when he answered. He sounded way too interested in seeing her again.

  She was rethinking what Duncan had said—that she shouldn’t have called him back at all.

  Chapter 7

  Shelley swore Duncan had stiffened beside her for calling Silverman by his first name. Maybe just hearing her talk with the crook irritated the Highlander.

  “Hello. Is this the pretty wolf I met in the forest?” Sal asked, almost sounding bubbly.

  She wanted to throw up, hated having to act, and knew that if she had been asked to be an extra in the film with Duncan, she would have made a real muddle of it.

  “Shelley,” she quickly said, not liking the way he thought he was ingratiating himself with her with his glib talk. The man was so full of himself that he hadn’t even asked her name. “I won’t be able to meet you for drinks tonight.”

  First, there was a stunned silence. That made her smile. Then he began to argue with her. “I’ve already planned—”

  “I did have a previous engagement,” she said, stopping him from saying whatever he had to say. She didn’t want to hear what he had planned. She didn’t want Duncan to hear it, either. “I had my days mixed up. I wasn’t sure. That’s why I couldn’t say at the reserve if I could come over for drinks.”

  Thankfully, Sal must not have stuck around in the forest listening to her phone conversation like she’d worried he might. Probably because he had his girlfriend with him and was afraid she’d open her big mouth again and give away his location and what he was doing.

  He tried again with his smooth attempt at seduction. “Is your girlfriend a wolf, too? I could have a friend come over and—”

  “Um, no. I mean, I called my girlfriend, but I’m actually going out with a man I’d met who was kind enough to give me a ride to my place from the airport. He’s taking me on a sunset dinner cruise tonight.”

  The silence was palpable. Duncan smirked in a purely wolfish way. He might not have his money back, but he had beaten the wolf at this game. Not only was he taking her on a sunset dinner cruise that trumped drinks at the guy’s estate, but Duncan had been chivalrous enough to drive her from the airport. Sal also knew she’d just met the guy. Sal was a little late in making a move on her. Having a female clinging to him in the reserve hadn’t helped, either.

  “I see,” Sal finally remarked, sounding extremely vexed.

  She was sure that Duncan’s offer had more than unsettled the cheat, who she guessed was used to getting his way in most situations. Money could buy a lot of things. But not her.

  “All right. What about tomorrow?” he asked, and he truly sounded like he thought he still had a chance with her.

  Shocked that he’d ask her out again, she felt her mouth drop open. She’d suspected that once she said she was seeing another man, Sal would get the hint and butt out. Apparently not. He had the arrogance of an alpha male backed by tons of ill-gotten money. If she went anywhere with him, all she’d be thinking about would be how Sal was spending Duncan’s clan’s money on her. She’d want to shift and tear into him herself to convince him to give it up.

  “I… don’t know about tomorrow.” She hated coming up with excuses on the fly. But even though she didn’t want to see the bastard again, she might be able to help Duncan get his money back.

  Duncan didn’t even look at her, saying louder than he needed to, “We have a pirates’ sailing-ship excursion tomorrow, remember? The Jolly Roger?”

  “Oh, yeah.” Damned if she’d known that. This was getting to be one really super-fun vacation. Except for this business with Sal Silverman.

  Again, silence.

  “That’s in the afternoon, isn’t it?” Sal said, sounding perturbed. “Unless it’s the dinner cruise again.”

  She figured he was doubly irritated because he now knew Duncan was listening in on the conversation. Being alpha to the max, Duncan intended to thwart Sal in every way he could, which made her smile.

  “Yes, I guess.” She had no idea which cruise Duncan had in mind.

  But Sal wasn’t about to be thwarted, either. “Then we can have dinner later in George Town.”

  One thing about wolf hearing: they heard. From quiet talks to phone conversations, they heard.

  “We have dinner plans,” Duncan said self-assuredly.

  Of course he was right in thinking that if she wanted to go out, it would be with him. She enjoyed his company immensely. Even so, why was she bothering to speak with Sal when the two men were having a fine conversation without her?

  She frowned at Duncan and held the phone out to him as if to allow him to talk it over with Sal. Duncan ignored the offer of the phone.

  She pulled it back to her ear but before she could relay Duncan’s words, certain that Sal had heard them anyway, Sal said, “I’ll call you back later.” The phone clicked dead.

  She slipped her phone in her pocket and folded her arms. “He’s angry.”

  Duncan gave her a self-satisfied smirk as he parked the car at the dock and opened her door for her.

  “Well?” she said. “How are you going to get the money out of him if you piss him off over me before you can even ask him about your stolen investments?”

  Duncan wrapped his arm around her shoulders and headed down the dock. “You know, maybe now that he’s got a little female wolf to pursue, he’ll come out of hiding—no goons, no girlfriend—and then I can take him to task one-on-one.”

  “That could work. You’re a genius.”

  He kissed her cheek. “You should tell my brothers that. But in truth, I don’t want you involved.”

  “As soon as he tried to pick me up at the reserve, I became involved. Are we really going out on a pirate ship tomorrow?”

  “Aye, lass. In the 1600s, pirates made port here. So the Jolly Roger excursion is a way to have some sporting good fun with a poke at the past.”

  She thought he was too broke. She truly believed him in that regard. “But… what about your finances?”

  “Ian will understand the necessity. The money I was paid as an extra is mixed in with the clan’s money, but even so, I should have some say in this. Besides, the expense of a room is not the same as an expense in drawing out the enemy.”

  Drawing out the enemy? Or doing whatever he could to protect Shelley from the bastard coming after her? She wished she was swimming in money so she could pay for the extra excursions for both of them. “Does the pirate ship have a gangplank?”

  “Aye, what respectable pirate ship would not? Now, if I had my trusty claymore, I’d make all the scurvy pirates walk the plank and take my sea wolf on a nice long sail. You do have sea legs, don’t you, lass? You seemed to love the water, but I didn’t ask if boats bothered you.”

  “Oh yes, I love the water and I love to sail.” She settled next to him on the catamaran where other couples had found places to call their own for the cruise.

  Duncan ordered Baileys Irish Cream for
Shelley and a whiskey for himself.

  The turquoise waters were so inviting that she wanted to slip into them and swim right beside the boat. “Maybe if we’re not too tired tonight, we could swim with the sharks again.”

  He chuckled and wrapped his arm around her as they sailed out to sea. The lulling feel of the boat cutting through the placid water, with Duncan holding her like this, made her feel as though she was in heaven. About twenty people were on the boat, all having their own conversations and enjoying the wind in the sails and the trip out to sea just like Shelley and Duncan were.

  “It might be tempting fate to swim in the water at night again with the sharks feeding more often then. But aye, if you want to risk it, I’ll protect you,” Duncan remarked.

  She smiled and sipped her Baileys. “You are such a brave Highlander. What about stingrays?”

  “What about them? I’m not sure punching them in the nose would keep them away from you if one decided to attack.” He finished his whiskey and paid for another.

  She laughed and squeezed his arm. “No, you can take a boat out to an area to snorkel and feed the rays. Would you want to swim with the stingrays? My treat.”

  His eyes sparkled with merriment. “When you put it that way… how can a Scot resist?”

  “You wouldn’t be afraid they’d eat you, would you?”

  “Not me. I would be afraid they’d grab one of those bikini strings of yours and…” He frowned at her. “You have to wear something else on the pirate ship and when we go snorkeling with the rays. If any man looked you over for even a fraction of a second wearing so little—and he’d be doing it for a lot longer than that—I’d have to rearrange his face.”

  She laughed. “I only wear the bikini when swimming at night, normally just when I’m out with my girlfriend. I hadn’t expected you to follow me down to the water. If I’m to walk the plank and jump into the deep, blue sea, I definitely would risk losing my bikini. Besides, it’s family fare during the day, so I’ll dress modestly. Swim trunks down to my knees with a big billowing skirt and a high neckline.”

 

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