Werewolf in Seattle

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Werewolf in Seattle Page 24

by Vicki Lewis Thompson


  It was a Scottish castle, an authentic one as opposed to the new, modernized version Henry had built for Geraldine. MacDowell House was the real deal and it had the balky plumbing and moldy storerooms to prove it. He loved the place, but he wasn’t sure if Luna, used to Whittier House’s conveniences, would.

  And then there was the issue of the general mood of the place. His mother and father weren’t party animals, that was for sure. Duncan could be counted on to cheer things up, though.

  If Colin showed up with Luna, and Duncan invited a lively female friend, the four of them might be able to blow the cobwebs out of the dreary old place. That was pure fantasy, of course. Luna wouldn’t want to go in the first place.

  He needed to stop thinking about impossible dreams and enjoy her company while he could, along with that of her three partners in crime. Who knew? Maybe she’d worked miracles with Hector and he’d decide to hop in, too.

  Colin approached the spot where Hector and Luna sat talking. “Hot tub’s ready,” he said. “Or I should say, warm tub’s ready. Dulcie and Sybil want to drink wine, so I turned the temperature down. We’re all invited to join them. I’m going upstairs to change into my suit.”

  Hector stood. “Count me out. Not my thing.” He paused and studied Colin for a moment. “Luna seems to think I should stay on, even though you’re turning this into a fancy hotel. I say I’d be out of place.”

  “Luna knows what she’s doing,” Colin said. “A smart Were would stick around.” Which didn’t make Colin very smart, now, did it?

  “I told her I’d give it some thought. Well, time for me to be off. I’ll leave you all to your community bathtub.” He headed toward the small groundskeeper’s cottage he’d lived in for decades, but his step seemed lighter than it had a day ago.

  Colin took Hector’s place on the stone bench. “Sounds as if you presented your case well, lass.”

  “I realized that he’s been bringing teenagers here to work all these years, which makes him a draw for those who want to come back and reminisce about old times on Le Floret. He’s up to the third generation in some families. That’s loyalty.”

  Colin gazed at her with admiration. “Brilliant concept, Luna. And I’ll bet it made him feel valued to hear you say that he was an important part of the operation.”

  “I think so. He told me something interesting. George Trevelyan worked out here very briefly as a teenager, and according to Hector, George always considered himself in competition with my father.”

  Colin digested that piece of information. “That doesn’t surprise me at all. I wish…”

  “What?”

  He shook his head. “It’s pointless. I just wish I could be here to see how this shakes out with your grandparents and George.” He sighed. “But I can’t, so I should quit brooding about it and enjoy the time I have left with you.”

  She reached over and squeezed his hand. “Go on and take care of your reservations, and then come down and join the party. We’ll keep you occupied for the first half of the night, and I’ll take it from there.”

  He turned his hand over and wove his fingers through hers. “That sounds promising.”

  “I don’t intend to waste a minute of the time you have left. Y’all can sleep on the plane.”

  “That’s fine for me, but you have to work after I leave.”

  “And that’s what will keep me sane,” she said. “I’ll be so busy, I’ll barely notice you’re gone.”

  “Really?”

  “No, not really. But it’s the closest thing to a strategy I’ve got, so I’m going with it.” She slipped her hand from his and stood. “Time to get moving, Your Much Honoured Lairdness. I’ll meet you back at the hot tub.”

  “Or we could run away together.” He hadn’t meant to say it, but she looked so beautiful standing in the sunlight, her eyes bright as emeralds.

  She shook her head and gave him a tiny smile. “Don’t be daft.” Turning, she hurried toward the house.

  So, that was that. He’d asked her and she’d refused. Time to make those plane reservations.

  Had he meant that? Luna couldn’t imagine that Colin had seriously asked her to run away with him. But she couldn’t get the question out of her mind as she pulled a one-piece bathing suit out of her drawer. Geraldine had talked her into this suit after meeting resistance on the purchase of a bikini.

  Luna stepped into the emerald green suit, which had laces up each side. Once Luna had modeled it for Geraldine, she’d proclaimed it sexier than a bikini. Thoughts of Geraldine combined with Colin’s outrageous suggestion.

  What would Geraldine have done? That was easy. She would have responded Let’s go instead of You’re daft. Geraldine had, in fact, run away with Henry, or at least stayed with him in America when the MacDowells ordered her home.

  Geraldine had thrown caution to the winds, laughed at everyone’s expectations, and made a life with the Were she loved. Had Henry suggested running away together in that same offhand, almost teasing way?

  Luna sighed. “Geraldine, I wish you were here.”

  Grabbing a towel and slipping her feet into flip-flops, she hurried out of the house and over to the hot tub, where the party was already in progress.

  “Hey, Luna!” Dulcie waved at her from her spot in the bubbling water. “This is awesome! You and Colin picked out a great model!”

  “That’s good!” She hurried across the croquet lawn. She smelled fresh lumber and a hint of pool chemicals as she climbed the sturdy steps to the deck area.

  “Killer suit,” Dulcie added. “Will it to me, okay?”

  “Sure thing.” Luna laid her towel on the decking.

  Sybil lay in the water with her head propped on a towel and her eyes closed as she cradled her wine glass in both hands. “I’m in heaven,” she said. “If I’m not, don’t bother telling me. They should have hot tubs in heaven.”

  “Amen to that.” Janet sat on one of the molded benches. Her lycra-covered breasts bobbed in the water as she munched on a piece of cheese. “Oh, and not to worry. Dinner’s baking in the oven. There’s a salad in the fridge, and dessert’s in the freezer.”

  Luna climbed into the tub next to Janet. “I never doubted that you’d have everything under control.”

  “Have some wine, chica.” Dulcie handed Luna a plastic glass of white. “Fortunately I found these plastic doodads in the pantry. I’m not a big rules person, but we need some for this most excellent hot tub. No glass, for one thing.”

  Sybil sipped her wine, her eyes still closed. “And no negative comments, ever. I’m finding my Zen.”

  Janet laughed. “Don’t mind her. She’s going all California on us. But I sort of agree with that. Geraldine would have, too.”

  “To Geraldine!” Dulcie lifted her glass.

  “To Geraldine!” they all cried in unison.

  Luna glanced around at her new friends and knew she couldn’t run away with Colin and leave them in the lurch, even if he had been serious, which he probably hadn’t. They also deserved to know the news about her that could break at any moment. Hector wasn’t the only one who needed to hear it.

  She took a fortifying gulp of her wine. “I need to tell y’all something.”

  “You’ve slept with Colin,” Dulcie said. “Old news.”

  “That wasn’t what I was going to tell you.”

  Sybil’s eyes popped open. “He has a tiny little weiner? I don’t want to hear that. I want to keep my illusions.”

  “No! Honestly, y’all are so fixated on sex that it’s pitiful. This is important. My…my mother was a human.”

  “No way!” Dulcie stared at Luna in obvious fascination. “Girl, you know how to keep a secret!”

  “Hey, hey.” Janet made shushing movements at Dulcie. “This could be a painful situation for our Luna. Have a little compassion.”

  “I don’t care if your mother was a gecko,” Sybil said. “You’re still tops in my book.”

  “A gecko?” Dulcie started to laugh. “Sybi
l is officially toasted. But I second what she said. Your parentage isn’t really important, but I’ve never known anyone who’s half Were and half human, so I’m just curious. Sorry if I offended.”

  “I’m not offended.” Luna felt a rush of affection for her three friends. She would watch out for them, no matter what. “But I was worried that no one would accept me if they knew, so I’ve kept it to myself.”

  Janet poured herself more wine. “If anyone has a problem with it, tell them to come and see me. I have a drawer full of very sharp knives. And a cleaver.”

  “I have cleaning products that would fell an ox,” Sybil said. “One blast from my spray bottle, and they’ll wish they’d never been born.”

  “And I can do wicked things with a broom handle,” Dulcie said. “Wait a minute. That sounded rather exciting instead of threatening. Let me rephrase that.”

  “Forget about the broom handle, Dulce,” Janet said. “That’s only going to get you into trouble. You know karate, remember?”

  “Oh, right. I’m a black belt, come to think of it. And hey, if none of this works, we’ll just go all Were on whoever threatens our Luna, right?”

  “Right!” everyone shouted.

  Luna didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. “Thanks. You guys are terrific. I was so worried, and you don’t even care.”

  “We care about you, toots,” Dulcie said. “And I’m so delighted that you’re not a virgin anymore.”

  Luna gasped. “You knew I was?”

  “Oh, please.” Dulcie rolled her eyes. “When it came to sex, you were dumb as a box of rocks. We all took a straw poll, and the results came out solidly in favor of virginity as the only logical explanation, because you were so smart in every other way.”

  Luna set her glass on the deck. “I’m so embarrassed.” She allowed herself to sink down until the water covered her head.

  Janet grabbed a handful of hair and pulled her back up.

  “Ow.” Luna rubbed her scalp.

  Janet smiled at her. “Didn’t want you to drown from being embarrassed. Now that we know you grew up in a somewhat wonky fashion it all makes sense.”

  “And now,” Dulcie said, “we can tell dirty jokes and you’ll actually get them instead of just pretending to.”

  Luna retrieved her wineglass and took another gulp. “I didn’t know I was such a burden on y’all.”

  “You haven’t been, sweetie,” Janet said. “You’ve been a joy, and however you influenced his lairdness to go along with the inn project, we’re grateful.”

  “Here, here!” Dulcie hoisted her wineglass in the air again. “To Luna!”

  “To Luna!” all three of them shouted as Luna turned pink with a combination of embarrassment and pleasure.

  “Give me a glass,” said a male voice. “I’ll drink to that.”

  “Well,” Dulcie said. “If it isn’t the Laird of Glenbarra, the stout lad who deflowered our Luna.”

  Colin grinned at her. “Congratulations, Dulcie. You finally got my title right.”

  Luna took a deep breath and sank back under the water.

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Colin hesitated to intrude on the female bonding he heard going on as he approached the hot tub. But he’d promised Luna he’d show up, and he was a Were who kept his word. Fortunately he’d caught enough of the conversation to know that Luna would have a support system after he left. George Trevelyan wouldn’t ride roughshod over this lot.

  “This is not a bad hot tub, is it?” He climbed in on the other side of Luna and glanced down. She was still under the water. “Does she do that often?”

  “I don’t know,” Sybil said. “This is our first time to go hot-tubbing with her.”

  Dulcie handed him a glass of white wine. “For all we know, she’s a hot-tub virgin.”

  About that time, Luna erupted from the water, gasping for air. “Y’all are talking about me. I can feel it.”

  “We are,” Colin said solemnly. “And the big question of the day, the one all our viewers want answered, is, are you a hot-tub virgin?”

  “Okay,” Dulcie said, pointing at Colin. “He can hang with us anytime. Am I right?”

  “You are so right,” Sybil said. “He can even bring his pet gecko if he wants.”

  Janet snorted. “I don’t know what it is with Sybil and the geckos all of a sudden, but it’s sort of disturbing.”

  “So are you?” Dulcie asked Luna.

  “Am I what?”

  “A hot-tub virgin,” Janet said. “Try to keep up.”

  “Yes!” Luna threw her arms in the air, splashing water everywhere. “I’m a hot-tub virgin! And a phone-sex virgin! And a vibrator virgin!” She glanced around. “Whoops. Did I overshare?”

  Dulcie was laughing so hard she almost choked. “No!” she said gasping for breath. “Feel free to drink more wine, and tell us anything you want!”

  Luna ducked under the water again and combed her hair back from her face. She looked like a mermaid as she peeked at Colin through lashes dotted with water. “We’re not always like this.”

  “Yes, we are,” Sybil said. “We’re just not always this wet.”

  Colin smiled down at Luna. “It’s great. I like it.”

  “See?” Dulcie stood and refilled everyone’s wine glass. “He likes it. Luna, babe, I don’t know what you’ve got going with this gorgeous Were, but he’s a keeper.”

  “He’s going back to Scotland tomorrow,” Luna said.

  “He’s not!” Dulcie looked horrified. “Tell me it isn’t so, Laird of Glenbarra, just when I learned to say your title.”

  “It’s true.” He took another swallow of wine. “I need to straighten out a few things with my younger brother Duncan.”

  Dulcie’s eyes widened. “Be still my heart. You have a brother?”

  “I do.”

  “Is he as good-looking as you?”

  Colin smiled. “Better.”

  “Well, then, that settles it.” Dulcie finished topping off everyone’s wine. “You go right back there, and you bring him over here. If he needs straightening out, we’re just the crew to handle it, right, ladies?”

  “Right!” rang a chorus of female voices.

  Colin could swear Luna’s was among them. He wondered how Duncan would react to this bunch. Chances were he’d fit right in. It was definitely something to think about.

  “Oh. My. God.” Sybil sat up and wiped a hand over her face. “Do my eyes deceive me, or is that Hector walking this way in a bathing suit? God, it looks ancient. I hope it stays on him.”

  Janet turned. “It is Hector,” she said in a low voice. “Don’t anybody say anything crazy, or you’ll scare him away. We’re about to make Whittier House history, so don’t any of you muck it up.”

  “I’m sorry,” Dulcie said. “But that’s just not how I roll.” She made a megaphone of her hands. “Hey, Hector! Get your bony ass over here! We’ve been waiting for you!”

  “I thought so!” Hector yelled back. “How could you have a decent party without the Hector-man?”

  “The Hector-man?” Janet looked around frantically. “Is hell freezing over? Is the world coming to an end? I can’t handle the shock!”

  “It’s all Luna’s doing.” Colin leaned down to kiss her wet cheek.

  “That’s not true,” Luna said. “It’s just…us, all of us, working together.”

  “Yeah,” Janet said, “but it’s also you, toots. We were blessed the day you showed up. I hope you plan to stick around.”

  “I do.”

  As Colin heard the ring of certainty in her voice, he knew the answer to the question he posed earlier, the one she’d called daft. No, she wouldn’t run away with him. She was anchored to this place and these friends, as well she should be after all the years she’d spent as a vagabond.

  Only a selfish lover would insist that she give up the first safe, secure home she’d ever known. Only someone protecting his own interests would rip her from this spot and hope that she’d flourish in
an alien environment. He wanted only the best for her. And from what he could tell, the best was right here on Le Floret .

  Luna had never been surrounded by so many Weres who cared about her. Laughing with them, teasing and being teased, was so new and so special. Best of all, she could share this time with Colin, who seemed to enjoy himself as much as she did.

  She longed to stop time and hold them all in this moment forever. But Dulcie said she was turning into a prune, and they’d finished the wine, and Hector said he was cold, although he’d been as boisterous and crazy as the rest of them. Luna hoped this was the night he started taking some joy in life.

  As they left the hot tub, they all agreed to meet in the dining room for dinner after they showered and changed. Eating together wasn’t their normal routine, but it was appropriate for this special night, the last night Colin would be in residence.

  Everyone pitched in to get the food on the table, and more bottles of wine were opened. As a farewell meal for the owner of Whittier House, the Much Honoured Colin MacDowell, Laird of Glenbarra, it worked.

  Hector even proposed a toast to the success of the Whittier House Inn, and Luna knew then that she’d convinced him to stay on. The inn would be a blending of the old and the new, and Luna was optimistic about its future, even with George Trevelyan hovering menacingly in the background.

  They’d talked a little business during dinner, and Colin had suggested creating a walk-in freezer out of a little-used pantry. Hector thought he’d need a riding mower, and Dulcie said the vacuum cleaners should be upgraded. None of it was startling, and everyone seemed confident they could handle the new regime just fine.

  They all agreed that with a concerted effort, they could open for business the first weekend in August.

  “Can you be here?” Janet asked Colin.

  Luna was glad Janet had asked the question instead of her.

  “I don’t know,” Colin said. “I can certainly try.”

 

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