Her voice broke his line of thought. “No- Yes- I don’t know,” she stammered in a husky answer.

“Well, which?” He smiled gently. “Yes or no?”

“Yes, you did.” She breathed deep, trying to steady her heart. “Too soon, too much.” Her breaths coming quickly. She bet he could hear her heart beating.

After a moment of complete silence, Alistair broke the tension. “Sophia, I didn’t mean to.”

“Um-hmm.” Why isn’t he panting?

He looked at her, “Are you okay?”

“Yes, it’s just… I’m not used to things going this fast. We only started going out a few days ago…”

“You’re right. We have been dating for a few days.” Here we go. A relationship. For now.

“Dating?” she squealed.

His smile broadened. “Dating,” he repeated. “However, we’ve been attracted, even before the day I took you out to dinner.”

“Before?” Her breaths were calmer now, but the desire still raged in her body. If she could, she’d jump him right then and there.

“Come on, Sophia. Don’t tell me I was the only one affected.” If I want to fuck her, I have to accept her terms. And he smiled, remembering her words at the bank meeting. “That day you entered the meeting room at the bank, January nineteenth, my world turned upside down and it still hasn’t righted itself,” he chuckled. “I doubt it will any time soon.”

She sat there looking at him. Oh! But the man knows just what to say. He remembered the exact date we first met. “Well, I’m lying if I were to say I wasn’t affected, as well. Still, Alistair, I don’t usually make out with a man I barely know.” She smiled to soften the statement.

“So, I’m a stranger?” He smiled back. “I will have to amend this. Promptly.” He stood and picked her up grabbing her upper arms, lifting her as if she were a feather. “Let’s go. Your lessons start now.”

“My lessons? With you?” She looked as if she wanted to run away.

He smiled, shaking his head, “Worse. With Leonard.” He started to walk back to the house. “After an hour with him, you won’t think me a stranger anymore.”

She eyed him confused.

He laughed. “That SOB can destroy anyone’s reputation in five minutes with that angelic smile of his. I will be grateful if you don’t run away after he finishes.”

“So you have dark secrets?” She blinked. “And you want me to know them all?” What a strange wish. Careful, Sophia.

“Aye,” he grinned at her and laced their fingers. “That way you won’t be able to use that excuse to stop me again by saying I’m ‘a man you barely know.’”

Alistair stole a peek at her. Although accustomed to towering over women, with Sophia he believed he would be just her ideal height. Whether standing, sitting, on his knees, on the bed -everywhere - doing everything, no problem whatsoever.

They were laughing when they entered the library.


Alice breathed relieved and looked at her husband.

Leonard nodded, smiling, and whispered, “I knew Alistair would be able to soothe her. The sparks of attraction are in their eyes. Hmm… I just hope she doesn’t waver from her path. It’s Alistair’s chance to be saved.”

“Still, I have to set things straight with her. I’ll apologize later,” she whispered back.

“Do it if you want to, but I don’t think she’s upset anymore. It was a good thing that Ashford messed things up with her, Alice. Not that I don’t like him. But I like this brother of yours more.” He sighed softly, “Alistair deserves some happiness. Sophia is the right woman for him.”

“Leo, I have a mission for you,” Alistair said as he neared. He pushed Sophia lightly in Leonard’s direction.

“Hey, your accent is showing. See what I told you, Sophia? In a few minutes, you won’t be able to understand a word of what he says.”

“Pay attention, Leonard,” Alistair ordered.

“Very well,” he acquiesced. “What’s the mission?”

“Sophia thinks I’m a stranger, a man she barely knows.”

“I didn’t mean it that way-”

“Your words, lass,” he tossed back, his accent increasing. “So, Leo, tell her aw you ken aboot me.”

“God!” Sophia said drolly. “Does Alice speak like that too?”

“She does,” Leonard laughed.

“I do not.”

He grinned, not bothering to answer. “It’s a heathen mixture of Scots words, English, and Scottish Gaelic drawl in a very strong accent.” Leonard rubbed his hands, grinning angelically. “You’re sure, Alistair?”

Ach! Aye, verra sure.” He joked and winked at Sophia. “Next time she won’t use this excuse.”

“Next time? Excuse for what?” Alice asked.

Sophia flushed. A deep laugh bubbled from Alistair’s chest and he looked at Sophia with a wolfish smile. “It’s a secret, Alice. Don’t be nosy.”

“Come on, Sophia.” Leonard rubbed his hands and pulled her toward the sofa; she went along, sitting beside him. She thought it comical the way Leonard enjoyed this.

“Hey, he’s my brother,” Alice said. “Take care what you’re going to gossip about or you’ll sleep in the stables.”

“Alice, I’m more afraid of what Sophia can do to me if I don’t enlighten her about this jerk of a brother-in-law than of your threats.”

“Can I help destroy your reputation too?” Andrew asked Alistair.

Alistair smiled and answered, “Nae! Aw is tuilled ‘s a’ chòir.”

Sophia looked at Andrew, “What did he say?”

“Sophia,” Andrew chuckled, “I haven’t the faintest idea.”

“He said that one is more than enough,” Alice explained. “Our nanny was a fierce Highlander and she only spoke Gaelic with us.”

“How are you able to understand them?” Sophia asked, astonished.

“Practice,” Leonard replied and shrugged. “And sometimes I don’t. When this happens, I just say to Alice, ‘Yes, my love’ or ‘Of course, my flower’ and she calms down.”

“Ah! You…” Alice hurled a cushion at Leonard. He caught the cushion in his hands, throwing his head back in a happy laugh.

“Alice,” Alistair dragged Alice with him to another sofa, “while Leo discloses to Sophia all of my dark secrets,” he stared at Sophia, his eyes blistered with the desire that consumed his insides and he threatened, “you can tell me all the gossip your husband told you about the bonnie lass.”

Now it was time for Sophia to laugh. “No dark secrets in my past,” she retorted.

Then her eyes darkened and a strange look transformed her face, a completely different woman appeared in front of them. A dark avenging angel. “At least, none that he knows.”


Salisbury Plain, Stonehenge.

Saturday, February 27th, 2010.

07.45 a.m.

“Wait, Sophia,” Alistair gripped her hand. “Wait for Munro to let you out. The propeller is quite dangerous.”

Sophia smiled at his protectiveness, “I’m used to it, Alistair.” She opened the door and jumped graciously out of his EC145 Mercedes-Benz helicopter. Somehow Alistair managed to buy it before its May unveiling at the Geneva Business Aviation Convention and Exposition.

“Your mother is quite stubborn, isn’t she, Fairy?” He shook his head, aggravated, and unbuckled Gabriela’s harness.

“No, she is not,” Gabriela answered immediately. “She’s courageous and wise. Not stubborn.”

Alistair smiled at the child’s prompt defense of her mother and picked the little girl up in his arms. “Ready for some mystery, Fairy?”

“Yes,” she smiled at him. “I love legends and mysteries.”

Garrick drove them to Stonehenge. Inside the circle, a uniformed guide escorted them on a private tour inside the circle.

“Do you know who King Arthur was, Gabriela?” Alistair watched her little face and she nodded. “So, according to legend, a long, long time ago, there was a very ugly war here between the British and the Saxons. The Saxons killed lots of English soldiers and buried them in Salisbury Plain.”

“Poor guys.” Gabriela listened with rapt attention. “And?” she asked eagerly.

“King Aurelius Ambrosius, Arthur’s uncle, wanted to build a monument to the slain soldiers. A big one, to represent their bravery. So he enlisted the help of Merlin, the wizard, who told him about an existing stone circle in Ireland. King Aurelius sent his brother, Uther Pendragon, and Merlin to the Giants’ Dance which is on Mount Killaraus in Ireland.”

“What is the Giants’ Dance?”

“These stones,” he motioned his hand to the enormous monument, “they were giants who were turned into stone for celebrating the Sabbath.”

“Why?” The little girl frowned at him, confused, “the Shabbat is sacred.”

Alistair smiled at her and put a curl of blonde hair, which the cold wind blew out of her ponytail, behind her ear. “It’s the Sabbath, not the Shabbat. They were celebrating a pagan god.”

“Oh.”

“So Merlin magically transported them on smooth winds and reset the stones here. There. Magic, you see.” Alistair struggled to restore order to his strands falling over his eyes because of the wind.

“I told you,” Gabriela thrust her little fingers in his hair, keeping it away from his eyes, “you have to cut your hair.”

The sun rose above the horizon painting the monument and the ground with yellow, orange, and pink hues.

Sophia breathed in the frigid morning air, the perfect interaction between Gabriela and Alistair scaring the hell out of her. Is this for real?

Chapter 14

10.26 a.m.

The early morning wind had waned into a soft breeze that still tousled Alistair’s long black hair, toying with it. Some bangs fell over his forehead and eyes. Sophia lifted her hand to touch the silky strands, brushing them to uncover his eyes.