Satisfaction flooded through her. There were no admonitions that it was a foolish plan, that she was too weak, that she would have perished in the mountains. Instead, he trusted her. He respected her enough to know she would have found him.
“You didn’t fail me, Logan.”
Turning from the bed to her, he slid a knuckle down her cheek. “I brought you something.”
He dug into the folds of his plaid and brought something out. She gasped. Was that her mother’s brooch?
“What have you done to it? ” She gazed wide-eyed at the enormous clear gem that had replaced the agate. “Is that a diamond?”
“I’m fairly certain it is,” he said. “And this is exactly how it appeared when I first saw you.”
“You went back to that place?”
He nodded. “I don’t know how—I wasn’t intending to go there. But when I stopped the horse, there I was. Your brooch was on the ground. Partially buried in water and mud, but the gem sparkled and caught my eye.”
“That gem?” she questioned, still not quite believing it.
He frowned at her. “Aye.” He turned the brooch over in his hand so they could study it from different angles. “You cannot believe this is an agate.”
She released a breath. “It was an agate last I saw it. It was . . . an amber color.” Now it was crystal clear, with the barest hint of gold that glimmered when the firelight washed over it.
And then it struck her. “Oh. Heavenly Lord . . .”
“What is it?”
She blinked at her brooch. “My mother. She said . . .” How could she voice it without sounding mad? “She said this brooch would tell me when I met my soul mate. The man I’m supposed to spend my life with. I . . . I think it’s telling me now.”
Logan’s frown deepened. “How can that be?”
“The agate has transformed into a diamond.”
For long moments, they both stared at the enormous gem, scarcely breathing. It merely sat on Logan’s hand, the dragon’s talons wrapped protectively over it, glittering in the light of the fire.
“Come home with me, Maggie.”
Her gaze snapped up to the harsh lines of his face. His wide forehead, thick brows, strong nose, and his dark eyes. He was the most beautiful man she’d ever seen. The most masculine.
She reached up to touch his rugged cheek. “I’ve never wanted to be taken care of,” she murmured. “But when you are near me, Logan, I want you to care for me. I want your protection, the safety that I know you can offer me. I want to go home with you.” She swallowed, almost afraid to reveal her heart. “But I wish to care for you as well. Protect you as well. I wish to be your partner. In all ways.”
Logan smiled. “Of course. I wouldn’t expect anything less.” He paused, then swiped the pad of his thumb over the plump part of her lower lip. “I want to marry you, stand beside you, sleep with you. I want you to bear my children. I want to grow old with you.”
“But . . .” She took a deep, sobbing breath. “But what of Torean and Innes? They’ll come after you.”
“Munroe is dead, Maggie.”
“What?” she gasped.
“I killed him.”
“What . . . what happened?”
Setting the brooch on the arm of the chair, he once again drew her close. “I found Munroe abusing a woman named Mary Steward.”
“Poor Mary,” Maggie breathed. “Did Torean see what happened to her?”
Logan nodded.
Maggie pushed out a breath. “He finally understands what a brute Innes is.”
“Aye. After the duel, he asked me to stay at the castle for Hogmanay. I think, even before I told him about Munroe blinding me, he suspected the man had cheated—”
“Is that what Innes did to you?” she breathed. “Blinded you? I didn’t know. I was certain something horrible had happened.” She touched a fingertip to the corner of his eye.
“Aye.”
“But you can see now?”
He nodded. “The effect was temporary.”
“So Torean understood and regretted his promises to Innes, but was trying to work out how he could honorably repudiate those promises without gaining the enmity of the Munroes?” she asked.
“Exactly. He is still cautious and unsure of his leadership, and I think he was taking his time to work out his final decision on the matter. He was trying to be wise. Yet when he heard the gunshot and saw Mary Steward so ill used—well, he regretted Munroe’s fate no more than I did.”
She looked up at Logan in wonder, stroking her hand along his cheek. A late-n ight dark bristle had broken out over his jaw, and it scraped against her fingertips. “You’ve saved me after all. Twice.”
“He’ll never bother you again. And he’ll never hurt another woman.”
She shuddered. “I . . . I’m glad.”
“I brought you something else.” Logan dug into the folds of his plaid and brought out two small packets. He handed them to her. “Open them.”
She complied, grinning when she saw what they contained. “Salt. And coals.”
“Your cousin asked me to give them to you. He said you’d understand.”
She looked up at him. “Does this mean . . . ?”
“Aye, Maggie. He’s given us his blessing. Munroe is dead, so there is no more lure of a political alliance with his clan, though he assured me that the politics no longer matter to him. The laird has approved our union.”
Emotion surged through Maggie, so sweet and so strong she could scarcely breathe.
Logan Douglas was her destiny. The look of love in his eyes obliterated any lingering doubts she might have held on to. He was hers. The agate in her mother’s brooch had transformed into a diamond, confirming it.
“I love you,” he said. “I’ve loved you from the moment I saw you, and when you awoke and opened your mouth to challenge me I loved you more. When we made love the first time, my love for you grew, and then it grew more in the days afterward as we lay together, sharing ourselves with each other. I love you as I’ve never loved another soul. Will you be mine, Maggie MacDonald?”
“Aye, Logan Douglas. If you will be mine in return.”
He touched a callused fingertip to her lips. “Aye, my love. I will be yours.”
Sweet happiness swelled in Maggie’s chest. She pushed her fingers into Logan’s silky black hair and drew his head close.
“I love you, Logan Douglas,” she whispered, gazing into the shining depths of his eyes. Then she leaned forward and claimed the soft, masculine lips that would belong to her forevermore.
Yuletide Enchantment
SOPHIE RENWICK
Chapter One
DECEMBER 20, 1869 THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND
Isobel had been six the first time she had seen him. It had been midsummer’s day, and the Scottish air had been warm and scented with wildflowers and heather. He was drinking the cool, clear waters from a loch and didn’t notice her watching him. She had stood still for long minutes, mesmerized by the magical aura she sensed around him. The next time was when she was thirteen, the day of her mother’s funeral. He had stood atop the hill and watched them through the thick mist that hovered over the church graveyard. She had shielded her eyes in order to see him better. Despite the distance separating them, she somehow felt that they were connected in a strange, otherworldly way. She had felt solace then, during that dark hour. Her heart was less heavy, her pain more tolerable.
The next time, she was sixteen, racing along on her new mount, her hair whipping wildly behind her as she ran the mare through the grouse and heather while reveling in her newfound freedom. He had followed her path, and when the mare’s hoof had stumbled over a rock and thrown her to the ground, she had opened her eyes to see his fuzzy outline towering above her.
It had been five years since that day she’d been tossed from her horse and struck her head on an old stone cairn. Years since she had seen him. Yet she hadn’t wondered if he still resided near MacDonald Hall, for she knew he di
d. She’d felt him still, that mystical connection that was so strange, yet familiar.
Today he was standing on a hilltop, the mist combining with snow as it fell from the clouds, blanketing the Highlands. He was big, broad, a majestic lord looking over his lands. The power and grace he exuded mesmerized her.
The scraping of wood against leather drew her gaze away from the rugged hilltop, and the male that stood atop it. “What are you doing, Ewan?” she demanded of her brother as he pulled the bow from his leather holder.
“Shh, Isobel, dona make a sound,” he murmured as he deftly maneuvered his gelding to the left. “What a prize he’ll be mounted above the hearth, and just in time for Christmas, too.”
“You’ll do no such thing,” she snapped, struggling to pull the bag of arrows from her brother’s shoulder.
“Leave off,” he grumbled. “I want him for Father. And I want him with a big tartan bow.”
Panic suddenly seized her, and she struggled harder to grip the arrows from her brother. “You canna kill him,” she cried, nearly climbing atop her brother’s horse. “Ewan, you can’t.”
“ ’Tis a sign,” Alistair Douglas said as he reined his mount in beside her. “The White Hart doesna’ just appear to all for nae reason.”
“Look at the arrogance of him,” Ewan said, awe in his voice. “Just standing there looking down on us as if he were lord of these lands, and not Father.”
Alistair’s gloved hand rested over the bow, his gaze boring into Ewan. “You know the story of the beast, laddie—the White Hart is sacred in these parts. He’s a sign that the Otherworld is close by. ’Tis an omen we see. Leave it be, Master MacDonald, and find sport elsewhere.”
“You’ve gone daft.” Ewan glanced at the old gamekeeper as if he were a lunatic escaped from an asylum. “You might believe in those ancient tales of Annwyn and its creatures, but I no longer believe in faeries.”
“Bite yer tongue, laddie,” Alistair hissed, his blue eyes widening in alarm as he looked sharply around them. “The woods ’ave eyes an ears, and the Sidhe will nae have qualms about provin’ ye wrong.”
“That white stag is going to be stuffed and mounted at MacDonald Hall regardless of faeries and Sidhe and whatever other creatures may come to stop me. Let them come,” Ewan said with a smile. “It’ll make the hunt that much more interesting. Look at him, he’s all but challenging me to come after him.”
“It’s Christmas,” Isobel reminded him. “Must you take delight in bloodshed?”
“It’s not Christmas for another five days, Isobel,” her brother reminded her. “Just enough time for old MacKenzie to get him mounted.”
“We’re supposed to be gathering greenery and searching for the Yule log, not hunting. Put your bow and arrows away.”
“By all means continue searching for the greenery to decorate the hearth, and the log to warm our fire, but let me worry about the hart.”
“Why do you wish to kill him?” Isobel asked, exasperated with her brother. “Why canna you let him live a long and hearty life?”
“Because he is the ultimate prize. A White Hart is more than a stag, Isobel. He is a creature of power and magic. A rarity. A true hunter cannot resist such a beast. And this one, with his proud bearing, will be immensely satisfying to run to ground.”
“You trespass on hallowed ground, Master MacDonald. This is Sidhe ground. The stag is a warning to ye.”
“Warning acknowledged,” Ewan said with a smile. “Now it is time to hunt.”
“You’re not looking to go after that, are you?” the Earl of St. Clair shouted as he came riding up beside them. “At least not with arrows.”
Ewan glanced at the earl who had appeared so suddenly. By the look of his lordship’s horse, he had ridden fast and hard. “What brings you to these parts, my lord?” Ewan asked suspiciously.
“Not to poach on MacDonald lands, I assure you,” the earl replied with characteristic dryness. His gaze then turned to her. “Good day, Miss MacDonald. You are looking very lovely this afternoon. The Scottish air becomes you.”
Isobel felt herself bristling under the earl’s blatant stare and the little jab she perceived. She had spent the better part of the year in England with her father and brothers knowing the earl never left his family seat in the Highlands. She had effectively avoided him, until now. “Good day to you, my lord.”
“It is good to have you and your family back at MacDonald Hall.”
“Indeed, but for how long it will be I canna say. I have grown rather fond of London, and I daresay I would be leaving behind a good many friends.”
His gray gaze narrowed. “I am sure, Miss MacDonald, that here you might find any number of friends to replace those in London.”
He was too far from home to be out on a casual jaunt, Isobel thought as she watched a muscle work in his jaw. She could well imagine what sort of business had made the reclusive earl leave his manor, which was on the far side of the hill and a treacherous ride in this weather.
“Ah, St. Clair.” Her eldest brother, Stuart, greeted the earl as he rode up. “Father said you had arrived to welcome us back to the district. I thought, or rather hoped, that I might find you here.”
St. Clair regarded her brother with a hooded gaze. “It appears that I have arrived just in time. Your brother has an eye for this hart and is bent on seeing it stuffed and mounted.”
“I’ve hunted this beast since I was sixteen, and he has always evaded me,” Ewan said with more than a bit of petulance. “This time he won’t.”
Isobel tried once more to tug on the leather strap, but Ewan nudged his horse forward, and out of her grasp. “Go on with Alistair,” Ewan told her. “Take the sleigh and load it with greenery. I’ll meet you back at the hall for a cup of wassail.”
With a nudge of his boots, Ewan sent his mount racing toward the hill where the stag stood motionless. Stuart and St. Clair went racing after him, but it wasn’t clear to Isobel if the earl was actually helping or hindering her brother.
“What now?” she asked the old retainer as she watched Ewan and Stuart maneuver their mounts among the stone remnants of what had once been a glorious medieval castle.
“We leave.”
Alistair turned his huge bay around and cantered to the sleigh where Isobel’s sister-i n-l aw, Fiona, and her lady’s companion awaited them.
“Isobel,” Fiona called, waving her over. “It is a man’s pastime, the hunt. Pay it no heed. Come, you can ride with me, and Mr. Douglas can bring your horse back.”
No heed, indeed. Glancing over her shoulder, she watched the stag. Defiantly he stood his ground at the summit awaiting her brothers and the earl.
“Run it to ground!” she heard Stuart call to Ewan. “It’s in your sights, man!”
Ewan pulled his bay to a stop and reached behind his back for an arrow. The stag charged, running down the steep incline, the damp earth and freshly fallen snow flying up behind its hooves. Instead of fleeing and running for the safety of the forest, it charged, antlers down, straight for Ewan.
Isobel knew that whether with guns or bow he was considered a crack shot. Her brother would not miss, despite the swiftness of the stag.
“No!” she cried, racing ahead. Her horse huffed with the burst of speed, and the thunder of her mare’s hooves on the soft ground momentarily disturbed Ewan’s concentration.
“For God’s sake, Isobel,” Ewan thundered. “Would you for once act like a lady?”
“I’ll not let you kill it just so you can mount its head on a plaque,” she yelled, circling her horse around them, then pulling up short before her brother. The arrow was now pointed straight at her heart. “I’ll not sit at the table and have it staring at me as I eat.”
“The point is moot, as you’ll soon be wed to the Earl of St. Clair and dining at his table.”
Her stomach fell to her toes as her head snapped in the direction of the earl. He was seated atop his huge horse, his gloved hands resting on his thigh. Their gazes collided across
the distance where the infuriating man held it, watching her reaction.
When had such a thing been decided? And why was it Ewan had learned of her betrothal before she had?
Because Father knew she would fight it with every ounce of her being. Father had more than likely sought to coerce her twin into forcing her to come to her senses in regards to the earl. Yet here he was, looking at her, challenging her to deny him to his face. She didn’t like the earl, and she didn’t like the way he looked at her, either.
The straining sound of wood drew her gaze. Shaking off the thought of the marriage she would not agree to, Isobel turned once more to her stag.
“Ewan, please,” she begged as she glanced over her shoulder, checking the position of the hart, who was still running towards them. “For me. For Christmas. Please don’t kill it.”
But it was too late. She saw Ewan’s leather-clad finger lift from the string, watched helplessly as the arrow left the bow and soared over her shoulder.
“No!”
Turning in her saddle, she saw the arrow pierce the white hide, saw the black eyes go round, turn wild, as the beast continued to charge, its enormous rack poised for fight.
“Get out of here, Isobel,” Ewan commanded as he took her mare’s bridle in hand and forced her mount forward. “For the love of—” He stopped short, stunned as the stag ran past her and straight at the earl. St. Clair’s mount bucked, startled, tossing him hard onto the ground. The stag, now in a murderous rage, charged the fallen man. But it suddenly stopped and looked at her. For the barest of seconds, their gazes collided. She saw something in those black eyes. A plea? But for what?
And then it was gone, running into the woods, and she and Ewan were on the ground, helping St. Clair.
“Come along, miss,” Alistair said impatiently as he gave her his hand. “It’s time to hie back to the hall.”
The retainer was nervous. She saw the trembling in his hand, the way his gaze continually strayed to the forest where the hart had disappeared.
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