The Perfect Gift
Page 1
Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Someday My Prince
Married in Haste
His Wicked Ways
The Perfect Gift
Once and Forever
The Proposition
About the Author
Praise for the novels of Christina Skye
Other Books by Christina Skye
Copyright
About the Publisher
Acknowledgements
With warmest thanks to all of the inspired booksellers who keep the wheels humming, the books moving, and the stories flying off their shelves.
A special thanks to those guardian angels in human form: Carla Watland, Suzanne Barr, Daniel Garcia, Kathy Baker, Andrew Hobbs, Beth Anne Steckiel, Pat McGuiness, Becky Meehan, Debbie Neckel, Damita Lewis, Tanzy Cutter, Suzanne Coleburn, Jeannie Heikkala, Vicki Profitt, Kathy Hendrickson, Jolene Ehret, Lisa Clevenger, Mark Budrock, Mary Clare, Cindi Streicher, Jenny Jones, Jennifer Martin, Kathy Campbell, Terry Gowey, Mary Bullard, Merry Cutler, Annie Oakley, Jana Tomlinson, Tim Lowe, Mickey Mans, and Sharon Murphy.
You are all solid-gold wonderful!
Loch Maree, Scottand
Late autumn
THE FIRST SNOWFLAKES OF WINTER DANCED OVER SCOTLAND’S green hills.
He stood on the high slope, knapsack on one shoulder and gaunt face turned to the wind. The stony heights did not deter him, nor did the chill of late October. He welcomed both wind and cold as the old friends they were.
His name was Jared Cameron MacNeill, and he had come home to die.
It had seemed a good plan long months ago, when he’d stood squinting at the beach beneath a baking Asian sun. Now the Scotsman wasn’t so sure.
His feet brushed the very edge of the cliff, where granite fell away to cold air and biting wind. The seventh after seven of his line, MacNeill felt his eyes glint with momentary pleasure at the sight of the mountains already snowcapped and bright in the gathering dawn. Then he turned his face to the wind and forced all thought from his mind. He simply felt.
How green the world seemed. How soft the heather.
Rounded slopes swelled from loch to bright loch. Even the air was different here—light and sharp. Pungent with peat and sea salt. The great loch had been home to his clan for generations of gain and loss, warfare and peace. Now Jared stared over the steep slopes, remembering tales of old feats and dark blood rivalries. Though he had been gone for six years, the brooding hills seemed unchanged. If only the rest of his heritage were the same.
Don’t look back.
Lines of exhaustion traced his lean cheeks, and his gray eyes were empty of emotion. Perhaps he had felt too much, crouched in the midnight streets of Rome, Bogota, and Kowloon. Or perhaps he had not felt enough. Not in the ways that mattered.
Don’t look back.
He stared at the rain-veiled peaks to the north.
Ben Slioch. The Fannich heights and remote Sgurr Mor towering over the cold glass of Loch Fannich. Out to the west An Teallach, bleak and dark, wrapped in perpetual mists.
The names came to him in the old tongue, Gaelic learned at his father’s knee in rich phrases that rippled through his mind like sunbeams off stormy water. The old sounds had not changed, nor had the air. Every breath bit at his throat, sharp with pine, peat, and the tang of the cold Atlantic. Jared savored the memories as he looked down where blue water clawed against the curving arms of ancient green hills and golden bays.
Once again he remembered his brother’s warning: Don’t look back.
Sound advice.
But it had come from a man who’d been too proud to heed his own words. Jared wondered if it was pride that had killed him.
Wind whipped at his long hair and lashed at his face as Jared realized that he never should have returned to this beautiful loch full of mystery and brooding silence. The secluded hills held the bones of warriors and saints, and he was neither. From here his journey led in only one direction.
His shoulders tensed beneath the folds of worn Hebridean tweed. Even the wind could not shift the heavy MacNeill tartan at his knees. He was the latest of his line to stand on this high hill, the latest to watch the sun paint tracks of gold over the great loch.
He would also be the last.
So be it.
A whine split the air at his elbow.
He ignored the shrill burst from the phone in his knapsack. He knew he should have left the cellular back in his car, but staying in touch was a habit hard to break. Nevertheless, his employers would soon learn to forget him, just as he meant to forget them. He closed his eyes at the thought, willing himself to ignore the shrill peals.
In a split second the Scotsman was carried back to a night two years before when his world had changed forever in a nightmare of heat and unrelenting pain. Trapped in a box in the stifling jungle, captive of a hostile government, he had discovered the boundaries of his own strength. Only through a miracle had he escaped dying from the nightly visits that had left his body bleeding and wracked with pain.
Don’t ever look back.
Now he was home, and it was two months before Christmas, but what did that mean to him? His broad shoulders carried the marks of old wounds, and his heart carried a heavier weight than that. He had come to Scotland looking for some hint of home, only to find that the great loch and the high hills were no longer enough to soothe his soul.
Another peal jolted his reverie.
Jared smiled darkly. The careful men in careful suits would soon forget him. He was of no further use to them.
As the phone rang on, he turned to the west. Closer to the edge of the loch, he saw three laughing men load wooden crates onto a battered green lorry. A pair of schoolchildren chased a herd of wary sheep.
Something brushed his face. Early snow? Or was it regret?
The phone finally slid into silence. Perhaps they had finally accepted the resignation he’d left on their desks two days earlier. He could well imagine their shock.
What to do now? He supposed he should follow the weathered stone fence up to the house of his youth. Taigh na Coille. House in the woods.
But Jared found he hadn’t the heart to see the gray stone walls or the tiny leaded windows. He certainly didn’t want to walk among the old graves in the kirk. He would see them soon enough, and not as an idle guest. His visions since Thailand were clear in that respect. His death would come when he least expected it, walking beside a lichen-covered boulder beneath a tree with a broken branch.
The vision had come a dozen times since his return from Thailand. First the rock, then the tree, and then the feel of his own body slick with blood. Falling. Falling.
He was almost glad for the distraction when the phone jolted to life once again. His fingers locked on the cold base as anger flared in
waves. “No more. It’s done, damn it. Haven’t you had enough of me?”
Silence hung. There was a low cough, partly lost in static. “Jared, is that you?”
He frowned at the sound. This was the last voice he wanted to hear, but old debts made this man impossible to ignore. “So it would seem.”
“I suppose you didn’t hear the calls. I’ve tried twelve times now. Not that anyone’s counting.” Nicholas Draycott sounded tired and worried. “Where in hell are you?”
“Taigh na Coille. Straight along Strath Bran and a right at Achnasheen.”
“Come here for Christmas. We’ve got rooms and more at Draycott Abbey, and there will be no other visitors, so you needn’t worry about tripping over anyone’s feet. You can come and go at your pleasure.”
“I’ve been there already, Nicholas. You and Kacey have done all that was possible—maybe even more. The rest is up to me.”
“Damn it, man, you’ve got friends. Don’t turn that hard Scottish back on us.”
“I needed to come home. To watch the dawn and walk the Highlands.” One last time, he thought.
“There’s nothing for you there, Jared. Not now. Besides, I need you down here.”
Jared would have laughed except the emotion was beyond him. “Need? You need what I was, Nicholas. Not what I am.”
“I need both, you fool. Now get yourself down off that brooding hill. There’s a car waiting for you in Kinlochewe.”
“Why?”
“We’ll talk when you get here to the abbey.”
“No. I’m done with that work.” Or any other kind.
“This is a personal favor I’m asking of you.” Papers rattled, but they didn’t quite cover Nicholas Draycott’s curse. “Since it would be bad form for me to remind you who saw to your release from that hellhole in the jungle, I won’t. I’ll only say that I need you now.”
“Just as a point of curiosity, do you ever take no for an answer?”
“Never.”
Jared stared off to the west. The sun perched blood red over Gairloch, raising a blush over the distant curve of the sea. “I can well believe that. But with all due apologies, you’ll have to this time.”
“I’ll come track you down, and I warn you I’ll make it damned unpleasant. Remember, I know exactly what you’re going through.”
The sea churned. Jared remembered another place of darkness and pain and nights too deep for hope.
Forget the box. Forget Thailand, he thought tensely. But he couldn’t. Maybe Nicholas Draycott realized that even better than he.
He cursed himself for his next question. “What is it this time?”
“A woman.”
“Isn’t it always?”
“She may be in great danger.”
Something dug at Jared’s chest. There were rules, and hurting a woman broke all of them. “Why?”
“Her father appears to have fallen in with the wrong sort.”
“Let him help her.”
“He disappeared about seven months ago, after an airplane crash in Northern Sumatra. He might have been carrying a fortune in historic jewels at the time.”
To his irritation, Jared felt a pang of curiosity. “None of them were his own, I take it?”
“Most were from the Smithsonian, but a dozen or so were on loan from the royal family’s private collection.”
For a moment the world hazed black before Jared’s eyes. Death was here, once again close enough to touch. Even the high glens and the silver lochs could not hold the darkness at bay. Perhaps death was the only constant in this bleak, chaotic world. “Why are you so interested in the daughter of a criminal?”
“A possible criminal,” Nicholas corrected. “And no matter what the father did, he was brilliant, just as his daughter is. I want her here at the abbey for a project I’m planning.”
“The daughter of a possible criminal? Bad choice, my friend.”
“Too late. I’ve made up my mind.”
“Then maybe you’ll be lucky and she’ll refuse. Either way, I can’t help you, Nicholas.”
“A very sophisticated set of criminals is involved, Jared. From what I’ve picked up in London, the matter goes far beyond simple theft.”
What theft was ever simple? “Drug world involvement?” Jared’s hands locked on the telephone. He knew better than most what rules that world played by. If drugs were involved, all the more reason to refuse his oldest friend, no matter the debt Jared owed him.
“Still too soon to say. If so, they’re fishing far out of their usual waters. That’s never a good sign.”
“What do you expect of me? Surveillance and explosive work are what I know, Nicholas. Nothing of that sort appears to be involved here.”
“I need your eyes, Jared. I need your hands, your reasoning power and that damnable Scottish tenacity. I’ll need surveillance, too.”
Frustration slammed down hard. “Sorry, but I can’t.”
“We’ll discuss it when you get here. Kacey has stocked enough salmon for an army, and I’ve put away a stash of very fine single malt whisky. There’ll be no more matchmaking, I promise you.” There was a sound on the other end of the line. “Oh, yes, Genevieve has a gift for you.”
Jared closed his eyes, remembering Nicholas’s young daughter, full of life and a thousand questions. But he wanted nothing more to do with their smiling faces and caring eyes. Even the thought tied him up in knots. He wasn’t fit for calm, polite society anymore, and he didn’t want people to care for him. Normalcy terrified him. Maybe a year in a box did that, too.
Nicholas should understand, if anyone could. He had endured his own months of hell in Asia, captive at the hands of a crazed warlord flush with blood money from acres of opium fields. So why was he playing hardball now?
“I can’t, Nicholas. You’re not listening to me.”
“Because I don’t hear anything but rubbish. Kinlochewe, MacNeill.” The twelfth viscount Draycott’s voice was curt. “One hour. Look for the blue Rover.”
The phone clicked dead.
Jared scowled at the handset. Damn the man. Damn a world where death struck with relentless frequency and absolutely no fairness.
Slowly he housed the phone and shouldered his knapsack, while the wind drove over the cliffs and seabirds soared above him, clumsy atop the churning silver loch.
Jared could picture Draycott Abbey clearly, the hereditary home of centuries of blue-blooded Draycotts with a legacy dating back to the age of William the Conqueror. The shadowed rooms were heavy with history and a tangible sense of magic. Jared had felt welcome there, even when he couldn’t escape a twitching at his neck and the sense of shadows moving just beyond his vision.
Haunted, so it was said. Even Nicholas didn’t deny the legend. Some even said that a surly Draycott ancestor still walked the parapets on moonless nights, warding off danger from his beloved granite walls.
Purest nonsense, of course. Had there been any ghosts wandering about the abbey, Jared would have seen them. But of course that was one secret even Nicholas didn’t yet know.
Jared looked north to the snowcapped peaks, aware only of silence. A cold wind brushed his face like ghostly fingers.
He should have known that coming home would be a mistake. There was nothing to hold him here in this place of dead warriors and forgotten saints. He couldn’t go back and he couldn’t forget. The tension never seemed to leave him now.
Ah well, he might as well go and lend Nicholas a hand. After all, Jared had nothing else to do. Considering the clarity of his visions, he had time—-and only time—to kill.
Draycott Abbey
Sussex, England
Two days later
The fire crackled softly, casting golden light over a row of Italian crystal paperweights and shelves filled with books. Jared waited, unmoving, while Nicholas Draycott paced before the study’s high windows.
“Will you have a drink? There’s sherry here, or I have whisky if you prefer.”
“Neither, th
anks.” Jared waited in silent impatience for Nicholas to get down to business. He owed his friend that much.
Nicholas finally cleared his throat. “First of all, let me make one thing clear. This has got nothing to do with fame.”
“What hasn’t?”
“The Abbey Jewels collection.”
Jared frowned. “Have I missed something? Are you and Kacey going into the necklace business?”
“Not bloody likely.” Nicholas rubbed his jaw. “It’s an idea Kacey and I have had for quite a while now. We want to re-create the pleasure that art has brought to us, and this seemed a good way to begin.”
“By making jewelry?”
Nicholas shook his head impatiently. “What we have in mind is an international exhibition that would begin here at the abbey, then travel to a dozen venues in England and Europe. We want displays that show the history and the magic of metal and stone. We want cases that take a design apart, piece by piece and show how gold is etched and silver forged. We want photographs of emeralds in situ in Colombia and jadeite boulders from Afghanistan. Then we want to show how they are polished, studied, and shaped to final form. These things are part of our heritage, but they are also the heritage of the world. These skills should be shared, studied, and documented before they’re lost to modern technology.” He gave a low laugh. “Does that sound pompous?”
Jared studied his friend over steepled fingers. “It sounds like a remarkably good idea. But I still don’t see how that involves me.”
“We’ve chosen our first artist. She’s an expert in classical metalwork, and her skill is remarkable, especially in view of her age.”
Jared’s eyes narrowed. “And she also happens to be the daughter of a criminal.”
“A possible criminal. No charges were ever brought against her father.”
“Is she under criminal investigation?”
“Not at all.”
“Then what’s the problem? Send out the invitations and get the exhibition on its way.”
Nicholas sighed. “It’s not quite that easy. For this project to succeed the way Kacey and I envision, we’ll need support at the highest level, both culturally and politically. We’ve gotten commitments from the British Museum and several scholarly publications, and an American foundation has just given a sizeable pledge of support. Two museums in France have requested the show next year, and the royal family has indicated their interest in participation. Discreetly, of course.”