A Very Alpha Christmas

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A Very Alpha Christmas Page 36

by Anthology


  A wave of sadness passed over him, her sadness. He finally glanced to where she pointed, but Traitor wasn’t there. No dog was.

  When his attention was turned, she’d slipped back inside. Before he knew what he was doing, he followed her. She gasped as he pushed open her door while she tried to close it. “What—”

  Fergus cupped her face in his hands and kissed her. He wasn’t sure what had come over him. Donna was sad, and the idea that he’d caused it forced him to act. It had been a long time since he’d kissed a woman, and at first he didn’t move his mouth. He just held his lips to hers. When he pulled away, she was breathing heavily.

  “Wha…at?” Donna reached for his face and pulled his mouth to hers. Her lips moved against his, kissing passionately. Despite the years of celibacy, the feel of her drew up the primal instinct to respond. He moaned, pulling her body against his. A myriad of emotions whirled inside him, but they were all drowned out by a rampant desire. The mindlessness of the moment took hold of them. Magick swirled in his veins, leaking from his fingertips into her skin. He couldn’t stop it.

  Donna pulled away and whispered, “Why did you do that?”

  “I say things wrong. None of my spells work,” he answered honestly.

  “Spells?” Donna gave him a dazed smile. He saw his magick dancing in her eyes. “I’m not as complicated as all that. Though I will give you this much, you have a very strange way of asking a woman out.”

  “Out where?” he asked, confused.

  “Dinner?” She smiled, and he couldn’t look away from her mouth. Her lips seemed swollen from where he’d pressed into them. “If I promise not to cook it?”

  “My family should not have insulted ya.”

  “Is that your sheepdog? It looked like it followed you here. It’s cold today. Should he come inside?” Donna leaned to look out of the open door.

  “What dog?”

  “Standing by that woman,” she said.

  Fergus didn’t see any woman or dog. “I think the light is blinding ya, lass.”

  “Huh, must be.”

  Fergus was used to magick being a big part of his life. But to see it now staring back at him from her eyes made him unsure about how to proceed. His nephews had caused a lot of problems in their own relationships by using magick. Then again, he wasn’t looking for true love. He’d had his shot at true love and had watched that love die in his arms. That reminder was like a cold splash of water.

  As much as he wanted Donna, Fergus knew he shouldn’t be doing this. Donna’s taste was still on his mouth. He wanted nothing more than to keep kissing her. No, that wasn’t true. How could he think that? He wanted nothing more than to get his wife back.

  Elspeth was his everything.

  What was he doing here? This wasn’t right.

  It felt right. Donna felt right.

  What am I doing? What am I doing?

  Fergus realized he’d said nothing and was simply staring at the woman. The daze of his magick in her eyes begged him to continue. He wanted to continue. He needed to go. He wanted to stay. He wanted his wife. He wanted Donna.

  Guilt warred with passion.

  “Perhaps I should go,” Fergus whispered.

  Donna blinked slowly. “Perhaps you should stay.”

  It took all of his willpower to release her arms from his grip. “I have…family…ya…aye.”

  Fergus practically ran from Donna’s house as if demons chased him. He didn’t stop until he was back in his bedroom. Traitor had barely moved since he’d left. The dog lifted his head, and his big, wide mouth seemed to smile knowingly.

  “Don’t look at me like that. I didn’t run away. I have to summon Elspeth,” Fergus said.

  Traitor grunted.

  “What do ya know about it?” Fergus mumbled. He fell onto the bed, refusing to touch the sensitive mass of his erection as a punishment for what he’d almost done.

  5

  Donna could not keep the smile off her face as she made her way up the hillside to the MacGregor mansion. Her latest gift basket hung on the crook of her arm. All was right with the world. The snow was perfect and evenly spread across the slope of the hillside. She had a date with a sexy Scotsman. Well, they hadn’t confirmed an actual time and place yet, but she had a date sometime in the future.

  She hummed softly to herself. The crunch of her shoes against the snowy cobblestone drive punctuated each step. Muddy tracks from numerous car tires led the way. As if on instinct, she reached for her camera and took several shots of the mansion on the hill. It wasn’t as if she didn’t have a thousand photographs of the house already, but today’s somehow seemed better. Holding the camera in one hand and the basket in the other, she continued the climb.

  The sound of laughter caught her attention. She turned her steps toward the side of the house to investigate further. Gaelic shouts became all the more pronounced. She couldn’t understand most of the good-natured teasing, but the tone of the MacGregor voices indicated they were having a good time.

  Without thought, Donna went to join them. For whatever reason, it seemed natural that she should do so. Her walk took her in the direction of the sounds emanating from the steep part of the hill that jutted toward downtown Green Vallis.

  “Ach, I’m freezing my balls off!” someone shouted.

  “Quit whining like a wee baby, Murdoch. Ya lost the last round, and now ya must pay the price with the rest of us.”

  “Shut it, Angus! That is because ya enchanted my log,” the protesting Murdoch answered.

  “And that is why ya are not the only one freezing your man bits off,” Angus said.

  “Ya know enchanting objects never goes well,” a woman said with a touch of censure as if lecturing a naughty child. “It’s no surprise his log flew a hard line for your arse.”

  “Oh, no, I do not want to hear about Angus’s arse,” Murdoch complained.

  “Ya both are whining like wee babes.” Donna’s steps faltered at the sound of Fergus’s strong voice. “Get those naked arses on the sleds or forfeit the title to me.”

  A shiver of anticipation washed over her. She had been able to think of little else since he’d kissed her. She’d waited for him to come back—hoping, praying, begging the fates to deliver him to her doorstep. When he hadn’t visited, she’d decided to go to him.

  Well, to be more exact, she’d decided to go to the grocery store, buy supplies, bake more cookies, and then come to him.

  “Let the MacGregor Winter Games begin,” a loud shout proclaimed just as Donna came around the corner of the house. Three naked MacGregor men raced snow sleds down the side of the steep hill. She recognized them as Angus, Murdoch, and Fergus. A gathering of family members stood behind the contestants, cheering them on. Her eyes followed Fergus in the lead.

  The stupidity of the moment was not lost on Donna. The route they took was hardly safe, and the temperatures were such that they would be sure to catch cold from exposure. None of these things seem to concern the MacGregors though.

  The photographer inside her instantly lifted the camera and began to shoot, even as the woman inside her blushed at the sight of grown men holding their manhoods and barreling toward the forest trees. Her lens zoomed in on Fergus, and she chuckled to herself. He looked happy, a wide smile across his face. Suddenly, a flash of light passed over the viewfinder. She pulled it away from her eye. Another couple of flashes shot out, moving from Fergus’s hand toward the other sleds. Snow seemed to explode from the ground as if hit by a grenade.

  Donna jolted in alarm. Fireworks? She lifted the camera to try to catch what was happening, but the men were farther from view. A shot hit Fergus in the arm, and he fell off his sled, somersaulting in the snow as the other two men disappeared behind the tree line.

  Donna dropped the basket and ran toward the fallen man. The camera strap across her chest kept her from losing the equipment. Her feet slid, but she kept running.

  “Gus?” she called when he didn’t move. At the speed they’d been
traveling, he would surely be injured without protection. “Gus!”

  She arrived moments before the others. Donna kneeled on the ground beside Fergus. He wasn’t moving. The siblings Malina and Iain, their cousin Rory, along with the supposed parental figures in the house—naked Angus with his wife, Margareta, and naked Murdoch with his wife, Cait—came to stand above her. Donna’s heart hammered as fear overtook her. She didn’t think, only reacted. The crimson red of blood stained the white snow, a horrifically telling contrast that all was not well. She moved her hands over the length of his naked body as if getting the nerve to go near the source of his main wound. She soon discovered his forearm was broken when she tried to lift it up from the snow. The bone had pierced through the skin. Fergus groaned softly. She instantly let go.

  “What were you guys thinking?” Donna demanded. Why weren’t they rushing to get him to the hospital?

  “Dammit, Iain! How is she here? I thought ya said the security was in place.” Angus didn’t bother to retrieve his clothing. The cold didn’t seem to trouble him.

  “It is. I checked it myself this morning after Jane and Lydia left to take Charlotte holiday shopping.” Iain appeared confused. “I don’t know how she slipped in without us knowing. Euann reinforced all of the protection spells before he left.”

  “Fight about this later. Your brother needs help, Angus.” Margareta MacGregor was a petite thing, but the way she looked up at her husband denoted who was in charge of that relationship.

  “What do ya want me to do?” Angus asked. “He is the dumbass who fell off the sled.”

  “You shot him!” Donna exclaimed. Were these people crazy or just stupid? “We need to get him to a hospital. Someone call an ambulance. Help me get him out of the snow. Now.”

  “Leave it to my Cait,” Murdoch interjected. He motioned to his wife.

  Donna frowned. What was Cait going to do? Bake a casserole? She looked like a 1950s magazine cover housewife.

  “What about her?” Iain eyed Donna.

  “What about me?” Donna demanded.

  “She called him Gus,” Margareta said. The others didn’t answer the strange observation.

  “It’s short for Fergus,” Donna mumbled absently, unsure why such a thing would be worth commenting on.

  “Are ya magick, lassie?” Angus crouched beside his brother to study her face. He slowly reached for her cheek. Donna wanted to pull away but couldn’t. Cool fingers touched her skin. His gaze stared directly into hers. It tingled where he touched her as if he physically tried to pull some truth out of her. “Did Fergus tell ya about us?”

  “There,” Margareta motioned to her face. “Her eyes.”

  Angus sighed and dropped his hand. “Aye. She has Fergus’s magick in her.”

  “Another inthrall like Lydia?” Iain asked.

  “Lydia Barratt, who married your brother?” Donna tried to follow what they were talking about. They didn’t answer her. She looked at the broken arm and then back to the family. What was going on here? “What’s an inthrall?”

  “Someone who can take our power,” Malina answered.

  “Malina,” Margareta scolded.

  “What, Ma? You’re going to make Niall and I erase her memory of this anyway.” Malina shrugged.

  “First things first.” Cait kneeled beside Fergus and placed her fingers on his arm. Donna stood and stepped away as the woman’s hands began to glow. A nearby evergreen made a strange creaking noise. The tree’s needles turned brown and started to rain gently onto the ground. The wound healed beneath Cait’s hands.

  “How…?” Donna shook her head. Cait placed her glowing fingers around Fergus’s neck. His eyelids fluttered as he awoke.

  “Ach, ya cheated! I call for another challenge,” Fergus protested, not really looking at anyone in particular.

  “Ya cannot call a challenge over an official challenge,” Angus denied.

  Fergus groaned. “How long did ya let me lie here, Cait? My arse is frozen to the ground.”

  Cait cleared her throat and looked up at Donna. Fergus followed the woman’s gaze. His smile fell some. “Donna?”

  “Gus,” she said, the word hardly audible. He pushed up from the ground, no longer injured. Cait kicked white snow over the bloodstain to hide it.

  He glanced around at his family. “How much did she see?”

  “She knows,” Angus said.

  “She’s shaking,” Cait observed. “Let’s get her inside. Iain, ya better check the border spells just in case. We don’t want any more locals wandering up here undetected.”

  “Aye,” Iain motioned to Rory. “Come help me.”

  “I’ll help too,” Malina stated, as if not wanting to be left out.

  Donna wasn’t sure what was happening. “What do I know?”

  “Magick is real,” Malina answered as she walked away.

  “Malina!” Margareta reprimanded.

  “We’re warlocks,” Malina added, clearly wishing to annoy her mother.

  “Warlocks?” Donna repeated.

  “Aye,” Fergus said. “What ya saw was just a little bit of magick. Nothing to be afraid of. It’s as natural as—”

  “Flying balls of light coming out of fingertips?” Donna inserted skeptically.

  Fergus gave a small smile. “That’s natural enough to us. Just like breathing is natural enough to ya. It’s nothing to be worried about.”

  “Get her inside,” Cait ordered Fergus.

  “Come, Donna.” Fergus took her by her arm and led her toward the house.

  “What did Malina mean when she said she was going to erase me?” Donna asked.

  “Don’t worry about that. I promise, none of them are going to do anything to ya,” he said.

  She wasn’t sure how they traveled so fast, but before she knew it they were in the front hall.

  Bright dots of light danced before her, and for a moment she thought it was magick. Her eyes focused, and she realized they were holiday lights on a fifteen-foot Christmas tree. It appeared as if someone had hired a professional decorator to stage the home. “That’s amazing decorating work. I would love to set up a photo shoot here. Everything you’ve done to restore this home is beautiful.”

  “The tree is Cait’s doing.” Fergus led her up the wide staircase to the second story.

  “She has a lot of skill.”

  “It takes her three seconds,” Fergus admitted. “She has my niece materialize the decorations from magazine pictures.” He stopped and opened a door. Light from the room shone over his form, drawing attention to his muscular body. “Should I not say such things to ya? I don’t want ya scared by talk of magick.”

  “Do I look scared?”

  “No, but I think most in your position would be.”

  “I don’t feel scared. I feel…” Donna looked him over, a little dazed. “You’re naked.”

  “Aye.” He opened the door wider to let her inside the room.

  Donna glanced in. “That’s a bedroom. You’re naked, and that’s a bedroom.”

  “Aye.” Fergus grinned.

  She let loose a long breath. “Good.”

  6

  Fergus hadn’t expected Donna to kiss him. Mortals normally couldn’t handle learning about magick. The old witch trials were proof enough of that.

  The shock of female hands against his naked flesh made him forget reason. He wanted her terribly, was starved for intimate contact. The ache inside him unfurled from a place of longing and denial. His mind focused on the soft glide of her touch over his chest. He couldn’t have stopped her if he wanted to. The woman held him spellbound more so than pure magick ever could.

  The cold plastic of the camera body bumped into him, and the reality of it pulled him from his daze. Donna leaned back. Her heavy breath punctuated the air between them. She lifted the camera strap over her head and set the equipment on the floor. “Why are you in my head?”

  “I think…” Fergus didn’t really have an answer. “I think maybe ya are under a spell
? Or ya absorbed my magick? That is why you’re not frightened by the knowledge of my clan.”

  “Or there is something very real between us. I don’t feel as if I should be frightened. I feel as if this is all meant to be happening.” Donna touched his face and trailed her finger over his lip. “I haven’t been able to think of anything else since you kissed me. I blew a photo shoot this morning because I was up all night baking you cookies. I honestly don’t know why I keep trying to bake. It’s like some strange urge overtakes me and I’m suddenly standing in front of the oven. Even now, there is something in me that wants to feed you.”

  “Do ya like me or are ya trying to kill me, lassie?” he teased.

  “I’m not sure. Kiss me again and we’ll find out.” Donna didn’t wait for him to obey her request. She pulled his face to hers and kissed him.

  Fergus let his magick roll out of him and over her. Though centuries had passed since he’d been with a woman, some instincts remained. In many ways, it was as if time had not progressed. The primal feelings were as real as the day he’d suppressed them. Donna’s kiss woke him up inside, feeding his hungry soul and arousing his dead heart.

  Her clothing melted from her body, pooling around her feet. She gave a small gasp as he ran his hands down her naked sides. Magick heated his fingertips and small trails of blue light spread over her flesh. It tingled between them, connecting them. If their bodies pulled away from each other threads of light kept them joined.

  “I want to make love to ya,” he whispered.

  “I thought that is what you were doing,” she answered playfully.

  Still, Fergus needed to be respectful and honest. “I can’t marry ya, lass.”

  The words caused a flow of emotions inside him. He hated the honesty in them.

  “I respect that,” Donna said. “I didn’t think this was a proposal.”

  * * *

  Marriage was the last thing on Donna’s mind though she could easily admit she didn’t really like hearing the statement. Her head swirled with a combination of desire and intrigue. She looked down to where his magick joined their chests and shoulders. It moved in pulsing threads of soft light between them. The sensation was like nothing she’d ever felt.

 

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