by Allie Mackay
Copyright 2006, 2015 by Sue-Ellen Welfonder/Allie Mackay
E-book Edition Copyright 2015 by Sue-Ellen Welfonder/Allie Mackay
www.welfonder.com
www.alliemackay.com
Cover Design by Jennifer Johnson of Sapphire Designs
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Highlander in Her Dreams
Allie Mackay
Praise for Allie Mackay
“Charming and innovative, Mackay definitely delivers a blast of Scottish steam.” ~ Publishers Weekly
“I’d follow Allie Mackay’s hot Scots anywhere!” ~ Vicki Lewis Thompson, New York Times Bestselling Author
“Allie Mackay pens stories that sparkle.” ~ Angela Knight, New York Times Bestselling Author
Praise for Highlander in Her Dreams
Aidan is a Romantic Times K.I.S.S of the Month Hero!
“A treat. Cleverly plotted, innovative twists, and snappy dialogue. Highlander in Her Dreams is a fun, sexy story. HOT.” ~ Romantic Times Magazine
Highlander in Her Dreams is a RRAH ‘Top Pick’
“Sexy. Imaginative and fascinating. Mackay spins a magical tale where a modern woman falls in love with a medieval Scottish chieftain. A fascinating mix of exciting action and passionate romance makes HIGHLANDER IN HER DREAMS a real keeper.”
~ Romance Reader at Heart
“Highlander in Her Dreams brims with Scottish charm, humor, and hot romance.”
~ Night Owl Romance
"An enchanting time travel!"
~ ParaNormalRomance
“Highlander in Her Dreams is a pleasing blend of wit, passion, and the paranormal… a steamy romance that packs emotional punch.” ~ Romance Reviews Today
“A fabulous mixture of magic and romance. Allie Mackay has penned an enchanting romance of lovers from different times. Highlander in Her Dreams is a captivating paranormal romance and a wonderful addition to a book lover’s library.”
~ Fresh Fiction
Dedication
In loving memory of my mother-in-law, Annegrete “Anna” Welfonder, nee Lemke.
A kind and soft-spoken gentlewoman, she was the heart and soul of her home, beloved by her family and all who knew her.
She made every meal a feast, every visit a celebration, and had the most beautiful smile I’ve ever seen.
While her cheesecakes could have topped New York’s finest, and her laugh was warm enough to melt the hardest hearts, I remember her best for her quiet, unassuming ways.
She was the mother-in-law I would wish for every bride and I feel blessed that she was mine.
Acknowledgment
This book was originally released as a traditionally published title by Penguin NAL. It’s such a pleasure to see it ‘live’ again. Heartfelt thanks to Ceci Giltenan and Tarah Scott for walking with me on the journey to give Alex and Mara yet another happy ending. I love you both so much! And an appreciate nod to Jennifer Johnson for creating the stunning cover.
Thanks also to the readers and reviewers who loved this book when it first released. Your enthusiasm meant so much to me. I hope you’ll enjoy the story anew. You, and new readers, might be pleased to know that this version contains fresh, never-before-seen material. I’ve made tweaks here and there, and added a few bits that were deleted from the original manuscript.
Last but not least, my deep appreciation to my very handsome husband, Manfred, for his devotion and support, and my precious little dog, Em. He was the world’s sweetest Jack Russell, and he made me so happy. His best buddy, my gray tabby cat, Snuggles, continues the tradition and is a wonderful writer cat, likewise much loved.
Highlander in Her Dreams
Allie Mackay
Allie Mackay is a pseudonym for USA Today Bestselling Author, Sue-Ellen Welfonder
“Time is of little importance in the Highlands, a magical place of picturesque beauty, languorous and seductive, where you can easily believe the distant past was only yesterday. The faraway and long ago not lost at all, but waiting to be discovered by those with eyes to see.”
~ Wee Hughie MacSporran, historian, storyteller, and keeper of tradition.
First Prologue
Castle Wrath, The Isle of Skye, 1315
“May the devil boil and blister him.”
Aidan MacDonald, proud Highland chieftain, paced the battlements of his cliff-top stronghold, fury pounding through him, disbelief and outrage firing his blood.
Fierce blood, easily heated, for he claimed descent from a long line of fearless Norsemen as well as the ancient chiefs of the great Clan Donald, a race of men famed and respected throughout the Hebrides and beyond. A powerful man who believed that Highlanders were the equal of all men and better than most, he cut an imposing figure against the glittering waters stretching out below him.
Topping six foot four and favoring rough Highland garb, he was a giant among men, turning heads and inspiring awe wherever he went. Just now, with his dark, wind-tossed hair gleaming as bright as the great sword strapped at his side and his eyes blazing, the very air seemed to catch flame and part before him. Certainly, on a fair day, few were the men bold enough to challenge him. On a day such as this, only a fool would dare.
Aidan of Wrath had a reputation for turning savage. Especially when those he loved were threatened.
And this morn, he wanted blood.
More specifically, his cousin, Conan Dearg’s blood.
“A pox on the craven!” He whipped around to glare at his good cousin, Tavish. “I’ll see the bastard’s tender parts fed to the wolves. As for you” – he flashed a glance at the tight-lipped, bushy-bearded courier standing a few feet away, against the parapet wall - “if you won’t tell us your name, then I’d hear if you knew what is writ on this parchment?”
Aidan took a step toward him, his fingers clenching around the damning missive.
“Well?”
The courier thrust out his jaw, his eyes cold and shuttered.
“Perhaps a reminder is in order?” Aidan’s voice came as icy as the man’s expression. “See you, this missive is scrawled with words that would have meant my death. My own, and every man, woman, and child in my clan.”
Had the scroll been delivered to its intended recipient and not, by mistake, to him.
Anger scoring his breath, he let his gaze sweep across the choppy seas to the steep cliffs of nearby Wrath Isle, its glistening black buttresses spray-washed with plume. He fisted his hands, his eyes narrowed on the long, white-crested combers breaking on the rocks.
He would not be broken so easily.
This time Conan Dearg had gone too far.
He swung back to courier. “How many of my cousin’s men knew of this plot?”
“Does it matter?” The man spoke at last, arrogance rolling off him. “Hearing their names changes naught. All in these Isles know you’ve sworn ne’er to spill a kinsman’s blood.”
“He speaks true.” Tavish gripped his arm, speaking low. “Conan Dearg is your cousin, as am I. He-”
“Conan Dearg severed all ties with this house when he sought to arrange our murder.” Aidan scrunched the parchment in his hand, its rolled surface seeming almost alive. Evil. “To think he planned to slit our throats as we sat at his table, guests at a feast held in our honor.”
He stood firm, legs apart and shoulders back, the edge of his plaid snapping in the wind. “I cannae let it bide, Tavish.
No’ this time.”
“We can put him out on Wrath Isle. His man, too, if he refuses to speak.” Tavish glanced at the nearby islet’s jagged cliff-face. “With the tide rips and reefs surrounding the isle, they’d ne’er escape. It’d be the closest place to hell a soul could find in these parts.”
Aidan shook his head. He knew Wrath Isle, a sea-lashed hellhole as wicked-looking this fair morn as on a cold afternoon of dense gray mist. But the isle’s brooding appearance deceived. With cunning, a man could survive there.
It wasn’t the place for Conan Dearg.
He drew a long breath, hot bile rising in his throat.
“He’d not find much foraging on the isle.” Tavish spit over the parapet wall, the gesture more than eloquent. “No women either.”
Aidan shot him a look, his frown deepening.
Conan the Red’s handsome face flashed before him, his dazzling smile as false as the day was long. Not lacking in stature, charm, or arrogance, he was a man to turn female heads and win hearts.
Men, too, fell easy prey to his swagger and jaunty airs.
Foolish men.
As he, too, had been. But no more.
Fury tightening his chest, he turned back to the courier. “I ask you again – how many of my cousin’s men knew of this perfidy?”
The man rubbed the back of his neck, his face belligerent.
He said nothing.
Aidan crackled his knuckles. “Perhaps some time in my water pit will loosen your tongue? ‘Tis an old, disused well, its shaft open to the tides. Greater men than you have spilled their secrets after a night in its briny depths.”
“I’ll see you in hell first.” Steel flashing, the man whipped a dirk from the cowled neck of his cloak and lunged. “Give my regards to the dev-”
“Greet him yourself!” Aidan seized the man’s wrist, hurling him over the parapet wall before the dirk even fell from his fingers.
Snatching it up, he tossed it after him, not bothering to look where man or knife landed. In the sea or on the rocks, the result was the same.
Beside him, Tavish coughed. “And Conan Dearg?”
Aidan dusted his hands on his plaid. “Have a party of warriors set out at once. Send them to his castle. To the ends of the earth if need be. I want him found and brought here alive.”
“Alive?” Tavish’s eyes widened.
“So I have said,” Aidan confirmed. “Out of deference to our kinship – and my oath – I’ll no’ end his life. That he can decide on his own, whene’er he tires of the comforts of my dungeon and a diet of salt beef and soured water.”
“Salt beef and soured water?” Tavish echoed again, comprehension spreading across his features. “No man can live long on suchlike. If he doesn’t die of hunger, his thirst will drive him mad.”
“Aye, that will be the way of it.” Aidan nodded, feeling not a shimmer of remorse.
“And” – he took Tavish’s arm, leading him from the battlements - “we’ll have a feast to mark the craven’s capture, the thwarting of his plan. See you that Cook makes preparations.”
Tavish gave a curt nod as they stepped into the shadows of the stair tower. “It will be done.”
“Indeed, it shall,” Aidan agreed.
The moment he slid the bolt on Conan Dearg’s cell, he’d treat his clan to the most raucous celebration Castle Wrath had ever seen. A lavish fest sparing no delicacies or merrymaking revels. With free-flowing ale and women equally generous with their charms, he’d make it a night to remember.
Always.
Second Prologue
The Isle of Skye
Many Centuries Later…
Only a few months after her eighteenth birthday and in the unlikely environs of a crowded tour bus, Kira Bedwell fell in love.
With Scotland.
Passionately, irrevocably, never-look-back in love.
Not as one might expect with a strapping, kilt-wearing hunky, all dimpled smiles and twinkling eyes. A powerfully-built Celtic giant able to melt a woman at twenty paces just by reciting the alphabet in his rich, buttery-smooth burr.
O-o-oh no. That would have made things too simple.
Kira –Always Take the Hard Way- Bedwell had fallen in love with the land.
Well, the land and a few choice secret fantasies. Delicious fantasies that set her heart to pounding and made her toes curl. The kind of things that would have made her parents regret every dime they’d doled out for her graduation trip to Scotland.
Land of her dreams.
A place to stir and kindle female desires if ever there was one. Hers had been simmering for as long as she could remember – the tartan-clad fantasies sparked by the colorful tales spun by one-time Scottish neighbors. The MacIvers had moved elsewhere, but the magic of her stories stayed with Kira, as did her dreams of misty hills, heathery moors, and bold, sword-swinging men.
Frowning, she crossed her legs and stared out the window, the image of a braw, wild-maned Highlander striking out across that untamed, heather-covered land a bit too vivid for comfort.
She moistened her lips, determining to ignore the nervous flutter in her belly. Prickly little flickers of giddiness that whipped through her each time she imagined such a man looming up out of the mist to ravish her. Her pulse escalated and she needed a few slow deep breaths to compose herself. Amazing, what the thought of a hot-eyed, handsome man in full Highland regalia could do to a girl.
Especially if such a man is bent on making a woman his.
Trying not to appear jittery, she smoothed a hand through her shoulder-length auburn hair, pretending concern with the tortoise shell clip that never failed to slip as soon as she fastened it.
In truth, neither preoccupation with a hairclip nor all the willpower in the world could shield her.
What red-blooded woman could resist a Highlander with a wolfish smile and a tongue so honeyed his every word slid through her like a dream?
Kira sighed. Truth was, she wouldn’t mind such a fate at all.
Indeed, she’d welcome it.
She just hadn’t been so lucky.
The only kilties she’d encountered so far on her holiday coach tour through the Scottish Highlands were men over sixty. Each one ancient even if they did speak with deep, bone-melting burrs. She recrossed her legs, her frustration minimal but definitely there. Not a one of the over-sixty gallants had even had cute knees.
Forget sexy calves.
As for filling out their kilts ….
Pathetic.
Kira frowned again and shifted on her seat. A fine window seat, and one she wasn’t about to relinquish. Not after she’d refused to leave the bus at the last three photo stops just to keep someone from snatching it from her.
After all, this was Eilean a’Cheo, the Isle of the Mist. Better known as Skye, and one of the highlights of the tour. A rapidly vanishing highlight as today was the tour’s only full day on the misty isle and she didn’t want to miss a single moment.
Not a heartbeat.
Not one precious glimpse out her hard-won window.
A strange sense of nostalgia and romance welling inside her again, she twisted away from the potato-chip-munching woman beside her and pressed her forehead against the window glass. Who needed paprika chips and diet soda when you could devour the expanse of Eilean a’Cheo?
They were driving north, along the cliff-hugging, single-tracked road through the heart of Trotternish, a landscape of rock, sea and brilliant blue sky almost too glorious to behold.
Indeed, wolfing junk food in the face of such encircling, natural beauty should be illegal.
She knew better.
She appreciated the view.
The glistening bays of rocks and shingle, the black-faced sheep grazing the greenest pastures she’d ever seen. Shining seas of deepest blue and dark rugged coastline. Cliffs, caves, and ruined croft houses, the fire-blackened stones squeezing her heart.
Kira blinked. Unexpected emotion pricked at her eyes, threatening to water them. She t
ouched her fingers to the glass, wishing she could feel the chill spring air, escape the coach tour and run through the bracken and faded heather, not stopping until she collapsed on the grass beside a sparkling, tumbling burn.
The woman next to her touched her elbow then, offering potato chips. Kira ignored her, making only a noncommittal mmmph. She’d eat later, when they stopped at Kilt Rock for a picnic lunch.
For now, she only wanted to drink in the glorious panorama. She was branding the vistas onto her memory, securing them there so they could be recalled at will when the tour ended and she returned to Pennsylvania, leaving her new love behind.
The MacIvers had been right. They’d sworn that no one could set foot in their homeland without losing their heart to Scotland’s mist and castles. The wild skirl of pipes and vibrant flashes of plaid. She’d certainly fallen hard. Crazy in love as her sisters would say.
Crazy in love with Scotland.
And crazily annoyed by the constant drone of the tour guide’s voice.
A deep and pleasing Highland voice that she would’ve found appealing if the speaker hadn’t been such a bore. She glanced at him, then quickly away. That he seemed to be the only kilted Scotsman close to her age only made it worse.