Read A Highlander Christmas Online
Authors: Sophie Renwick Cindy Miles Dawn Halliday
Paige turned, leaned against the counter, and met his gaze. He didn’t exactly glow, but he did in fact have a sort of aura about him. She could see him just as perfectly as if she were looking at a live man. Strange, how just a couple of hours ago, she’d been running for her life. “When you say it like that it sounds awful.”
“A woman like you shouldna be alone.”
Paige swallowed past the lump in her throat. “Um, thanks. I think.” What it actually meant, she hadn’t a clue.
Just then, the wind whipped fiercely through the cracks of the stone wall, making a howling, moaning noise that left goose bumps on Paige’s arms. She rubbed them. “What about you?” she asked. “Do you have anyone? Now, I mean?”
A somber expression crossed Gabriel’s handsome face. “I have Craigmire and his wife, the castle owners. They’re away on holiday, visiting their children in London. A fine pair, those two.”
“No one else?”
“Nay,” he said.
She liked the way his
r
’s rolled and the heavy brogue of the Highlands flew off his tongue.
Seductive
. She thought he could talk to her all night long and she’d be perfectly content. Maybe she could find a book for him to read aloud.
She’d keep all that to herself.
“Why are you here?” he asked.
“Well,” she said, pushing off the counter and walking to the large bay window facing the night. “I was determined not to spend one more Christmas alone. Not at the museum, not at the apartment, not walking around the park.” She softly laughed and stared at her own reflection in the glass. The candlelight made the image—
her
image—surreal. “So I booked a self-driving tour of the Highlands, did
not
factor in a snowstorm, and here I am.”
“Weren’t you going to spend the Yuletide alone in Inverness?” he said, seemingly right next to her ear.
When she looked, only her own reflection shown in the glass. “Well, yes. I suppose I thought it’d be different somehow. Or maybe I’d horn in on the bed-a nd-breakfast’s family Christmas.” She turned and looked at him. “I guess I was wrong.”
Gabriel leaned against the wall and studied her. “Mayhap no’. Here we are. Together.” He smiled. “Aye?”
Heat flushed her skin. “Yes. I suppose you’re right.”
He leaned closer—so close, it made Paige shiver. “Then you dunna mind spending the Yuletide wi’ a lonely, aged warrior?” His mouth lifted at one corner, making the dimple pit his cheek on that side. One dark brow raised in question.
Incredibly sexy
.
She smiled in return. “I don’t mind at all.”
Of course she didn’t mind. Hmm. Let’s see.
Nobody
on one hand. A gorgeous, safe warrior ghost on the other. One with ripped muscles, a killer smile, sexy tattoos, and, well, just plain sexy. And fun to talk to.
She’d be a moron to accept anything else.
This Christmas—Yuletide, rather—was looking up more and more by the second.
Gabriel’s gaze bore into hers for what seemed like minutes. Then that very same gaze lowered to her mouth, and even farther still, to somewhere lower than her neck, before slowly rising back to her eyes. “I couldna think of finer company, in truth.”
Paige felt that infuriating blush scorch her skin. She cleared her throat and rubbed her neck with the palm of her hand. “Do you sleep?”
Gabriel’s light chuckle made shivers race through her veins. It had to be one of the sexiest sounds she’d ever heard in her entire life. A total, carefree, guy laugh. And to think it came from a man who’d lost his life centuries before.
“Nay, lass, I dunna sleep. But I know you need to. You look weary, and your nose is swelling.” He inclined his head toward the archway of the kitchen. “Come. I’ll walk you to your bedchamber. Rest tonight, and we’ll see what tomorrow brings.” He gave her a deep grin, dimples and all. “You’ll need your strength, no doubt. Aye?”
She thought she could hear him say
aye
forever.
Paige smiled in return and began the walk through a candlelit medieval castle with the most unexpected, gorgeous host a self-touring girl could ever wish for.
Dead or not, Gabriel Munro set her insides on fire.
She never would have guessed how happy she’d be to have her crappy rental car croak in a blizzard.
Bloody hell, he couldna keep his lecherous eyes off the lass.
As they crossed the great hall, he slipped glances down at her. So petite next to him, built slender, fragile. He’d never met a lass with shorn hair such as Paige’s, but damn him, he thought it adorable the way it swung by her jaw, and how she tucked one side behind her ear. And those exquisitely shaped blue eyes and full lips made him wish even harder than ever that he had a live body.
He would have already tasted those lips by now.
Mayhap ’twas a good thing he was a bloody spirit.
“It smells great in here,” she said beside him, her voice and unusual accent a pleasant, tinkling sound. “Very Christmassy. It must be the pine boughs.”
“Craigmire’s missus insists on decorating the place,” he said. They both started up the staircase, Paige carrying a candle. “I told her no’ to bother, since I’d be here alone.”
“Sounds like you’re not too crazy about the idea of Christmas,” she said. “I suppose I understand why.”
He glanced at her. “Is that so?”
“Of course,” she held the candle closer to her face. “We’re a lot alike, you and I. While you avoid Christmas because of your murder—”
“You avoid it because it reminds you of how alone you are.”
Her crestfallen expression made him regret the words instantly. “Beg pardon, lass—”
“No, you’re absolutely right,” she said softly and continued the climb. Once they reached the top she started down the darkened passageway. “It doesn’t matter how we
got
to lonely.” She stopped at her door and looked up at him. “We both
did
. I for one am quite happy I booked a trip to the Highlands.” She gently touched her bandaged nose and smiled—really smiled, and it reached her eyes. The brilliance of it nearly knocked him backward.
“It’s the first Christmas Eve in years I’ve not spent alone. Thank you.”
Those two small words, coupled with the vulnerable honesty in her voice, nearly did Gabriel in. It made him uncomfortable. It made him regret being born in another century.
It made him wish with all his ghostly might that Craigmire would never return, and that the snow would never melt, and that Paige MacDonald from Fredericksburg, Virginia, would never, ever leave.
They stood there in the shadowy passageway, he with little more than his flimsy ghostly self, and she holding a candle that cast her already beautiful features into elegant lines and planes. It all but mesmerized him, and he knew he stood there staring like a whelp of thirteen—mayhap likely drooling, too.
“Gabriel? Is there something wrong?”
Focusing his gaze, he suddenly thought nothing could be more
right
.
“Nay,” he said, and cocked his head. “How do you feel?” He tapped his own nose, indicating her wound.
“Throbs,” she said, not taking her eyes from his. Then she lifted a brow. “But I’ll be fine. How did you change? From before? You know, your modern clothes?”
Gabriel smiled and gave a nod. “Aye. One of my perks to being a spirit.
Conjuring
. But one must concentrate on keeping the image intact.” He ducked his head. “I thought I’d become rather expert at it over the centuries.”
Paige shook her head and opened the door. She chuckled. “Seems like you might need a refresher course. You can’t imagine how you scared me, standing so close to me wearing just,” she glanced from his eyes, to his boots, then slowly back to his face, “that.”
He gave her a mock frown. “Does my plaid offend?”
Her face darkened with blush. How easily he could make her do that.
“Not at all,” she said quietly. Opening the door, she stepped inside and turned. “You’ll be here when I wake up?”
Gabriel thought the innocence in those words would remain emblazoned in his mind forever. “Aye. Good night, Paige MacDonald.”
She smiled. “ ’Night.”
With that, she gently shut the door.
Gabriel stared at the solid slab of oak for several seconds, then shook his head. He lowered himself to the floor across from her door and sat.
He’d not budge an inch until the lass rose in the morn.
Resting his head back against the stone—or at least going through the motions of it, since he felt nothing behind his head at all—he let his thoughts drift back to the full, lush lips and wide blue eyes of his intriguing castle guest.
’Twas a good thing he couldna sleep.
With Paige MacDonald on his mind, he doubted heartily that slumber would have ever come.
Paige lay awake for the longest time, staring at the canopy above her. She had blown out the candles except one on her bedside table and kept the flashlight nearby in case she woke up with her nose hurting. That wouldn’t happen if she couldn’t fall asleep in the first place . . .
Images of Gabriel flashed behind her lids, even when she did close them and try to drift off. She still couldn’t believe it had all happened;
was
happening. Her brain simply couldn’t accept it, and yet somehow she did. Naturally. As if she were meant to come to Scotland, to rent a car that would break down within walking distance of Gorloch B&B, and become trapped by a fierce, out-of-the-norm snowstorm.
All so she could encounter the ghost of a warrior from centuries ago.
Who was she fooling? Not only had she encountered him, but she’d become acutely attracted to him in a very short period of time. And it wasn’t just his shocking good looks, either. It was everything. That
never
happened to her. Ever. With a live man, or a not-so-a live one. She just wasn’t the kind of girl who attracted guys. She wasn’t
unattractive
—at least she didn’t think so. She just wasn’t flashy, didn’t stand out in a crowd. Blended right on in actually. She wore khakis and Smithsonian collared shirts to work, and during after-h our research projects at the museum, she wore jeans. Just not a guy magnet, so to speak. She lacked that certain something that other girls had.
But she’d just made a pact with a ghost that they’d spend Christmas together, so that was something.
And he’d called her beautiful . . .
How very real Gabriel looked. Even in the shadows of a candlelit castle, he looked more alive than spirit. So tangible, in fact, she had to resist reaching a hand out to touch him. A faint, vague line of aura shone around him at times, and only that reminded her he was actually a spirit. Dead but not-so-gone for centuries and centuries upon end, he looked as though he strolled straight in from the movie set of
Highlander
or
Braveheart
—only better. More authentic, perhaps. Or maybe it was because she knew Gabriel was for real and not an actor portraying a medieval hero. No offense to Mel Gibson or Adrian Paul, of course.
But Gabriel? Good grief, he made her stomach do flip-flops anytime he came near. She’d never seen hair so long on a live man before, and it hung loose, wild and beautiful, all at once. The color of black ink, like his brows and lashes, it was a stark contrast to his fair skin and green eyes. One could take all of that in if they got past his enormous size. She figured, going by her height of five feet four inches, that Gabriel had to be at least a foot taller, maybe more. Narrow hips supported by heavily muscled thighs, and thick veins crossed the tops of his hands, snaked up his bulky arms and over his chest. It amazed her how
alive
he looked, right down to the light dusting of dark shadow on his jaw, and the minute detailing of his intricate tattoos.
In her wildest dreams could she have invoked a sexier Christmas companion? She highly doubted it.
Pulling the thick down-filled coverlet up to her chin, Paige closed her eyes and allowed the darkness to swallow her, and the howling wind screaming through the cracks in the stone finally lulled her to sleep.
By the devil’s bloody horns, why wouldna the girl wake up? She must have been wearier than he’d thought. It had been nearly ten hours since he’d left her bedchamber.