His Best Mistake
His Best Mistake
A Maclean Family Legacy Romance
Lucy King
His Best Mistake
Copyright © 2018 Lucy King
EPUB Edition
The Tule Publishing Group, LLC
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ISBN: 978-1-948342-09-4
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Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Epilogue
The Maclean Family Legacy Series
Excerpt from Her Forbidden Warrior
About the Author
Chapter One
There. She was done.
Sticking her brush into the jar of murky water that stood on a table beside the easel Stella Grant took a step back from the painting she’d been working on. She cast a critical eye over the blur of bright colour that was supposed to depict the bowl of fruit sitting on the windowsill, and frowned.
Still life. Still crap.
How she was able to wield a pencil with a deftness and skill that had given her both a career and a sideline she loved yet was all fingers and thumbs when it came to a paintbrush was an eternally perplexing mystery. But ultimately it was irrelevant. This picture, along with the other twenty-four that stood rolled up against the wall of the guest room slash studio, was merely a means of catharsis and therefore destined for the fire.
Unlike the other twenty-four, though, today’s effort was unique. There were no shattered hearts bleeding across the paper. No mangled, dismembered male body parts lying next to bodies in various states of decay. No anguished slashes of black and grey and crimson. Just some plums and some bananas, and lots of yellows and oranges, purples and greens.
Which meant that she was finally over what had happened.
Thank God.
Not that she deserved a quick and easy fix. She’d slept with someone else’s fiancé. She’d broken up an engagement. Inadvertently, sure, because Ben – or Brad, or whatever his name really was – had made no mention of a fiancée when she went out with him that first time. In fact, he’d been very specific about being entirely young, free and single, the despicable, lying shit. But still. The guilt and shame had been unbearable. And the hurt. God, the hurt… She’d really, really liked him. She’d even thought he might be The One, stupid, deluded idiot that she was.
But this morning she’d woken up and for the first time in three and a half weeks she hadn’t wanted to cry. Or be sick. Her heart hadn’t felt like it was being pushed through a mangle. She’d actually managed to muster up a smile when a shaft of weak winter sunshine had broken through the dense cloud and turned the bleak, barren Scottish landscape momentarily spectacular.
And it was then that she’d begun to entertain the notion that she’d recovered. Yes, she’d been a fool, but what had happened was his fault, not hers, she knew now, and she was done beating herself up about that at least.
Feeling marginally better than she had at any point since New Year’s Eve when she’d learned that she was the Other Woman and her life had imploded, Stella cast one last glance at the painting then turned to head out of the room.
And stilled as she caught a flash of something out of the corner of her eye.
Frowning, she turned back, walked towards the window and peered out into the rapidly deteriorating weather. A four-by-four was making slow, awkward progress down her track.
Which was very odd. Apart from Mrs Murray, who ran the local shop she frequented once a week to stock up on supplies and who had thankfully picked up on her reluctance to chat, no one knew she was here. The cottage was way too isolated for anyone to simply be passing by and, anyway, it stood at the end of the track; it was a destination, not a midway stop.
So what was the vehicle doing here? Was the driver lost? Had someone come looking for her? Or was there some other altogether more nefarious reason for the visit?
At the thought of what that might be Stella felt her pulse pick up, and adrenaline surged because she was here all on her own. Anything could happen to her and no one would know for days, weeks, possibly even months.
Or not.
Heavens, she had to calm down. She really did. She was overreacting. Being ridiculous. She’d been on her own too long, with nothing but sheep and her conscience for company, and her imagination was taking advantage. Any minute now the four-by-four would stop, turn round and –
It didn’t.
Instead, to her horror, it suddenly swerved. Slewed off the track. Tilted one way, the other, then landed at a horrible angle in the ditch.
And then there was nothing.
For one heart-stopping moment, Stella stood frozen to the spot, watching, waiting, her blood pounding in her ears. Where was the driver? Why weren’t they getting out?
Oh, please let them not be hurt. Her house was miles from the nearest neighbour, let alone a hospital, and her car was useless in this weather. Plasters and aspirin were about all there was in the cottage’s first aid kit and she was no nurse.
The seconds ticked by like hours and there was still no movement coming from the vehicle, which meant concern for her own personal safety be damned. What were the chances of the driver being a danger anyway? Virtually non-existent, that was what, and, quite honestly, she’d had enough on her conscience recently to last her a lifetime.
Galvanised into action, Stella sprinted out of the room and down the stairs. At the front door she shoved on her boots and gloves and grabbed a coat and a hat, and then she was racing down the drive, through the gate and along the track, oblivious to the bitter cold and swirling snow.
By the time she reached the vehicle her lungs were burning and her cheeks were stinging but that wasn’t important. Hissing was coming from beneath the hood of the vehicle and something deep inside the beast was creaking. The airbags had exploded on every conceivable side and partially obscured the clearly male driver, but there was movement and there was swearing, which meant that at least he was alive, thank God.
Clambering into the ditch and reaching up, Stella yanked on the door handle and pulled the heavy door back as hard as she could until it clicked into place.
“Are you all right?” she said, panic and exertion making her sound breathless and shaky.
“I will be,” he growled, his deep voice – or, more probably, the cold – sending shivers down her spine. “Once I get disentangled from this.” He was shoving at the deflated yet still billowing fabric, but the airbags didn’t appear to be going anywhere.
“What happened?” she asked.
“Sheep. One minute the track was clear, the ne
xt a bloody sheep was bolting across it.”
A sheep? She hadn’t seen a sheep. But then it was snowing – lightly, sure, but wildly – and she’d been looking at the vehicle rather than the road. “They’re not used to cars around here.”
“They should all be rounded up and shot.”
“Thank goodness you weren’t going fast.”
“Too many bloody potholes to go above twenty. It’s taken me three hours to do fifty miles. The roads are atrocious and the suspension in this thing is lousy… Jesus… There should be a penknife in the glove compartment. Can you get it? I can’t reach past these sodding things.”
“Of course.”
Desperately relieved that he seemed to be OK, if understandably irate, Stella opened the passenger door behind him and climbed up onto the tan leather back seat. Then she wiggled her way through the gap in the front seats, vaguely and totally irrelevantly noticing that he smelled fantastic, and leaned forward and down to open the glove compartment. She found the knife amongst his keys, wallet and phone, handed it to him and then sat back and watched from behind as he began hacking away at the fabric.
Goodness, he was broad, she thought with a frown. And big. And he was now wielding a knife.
Hmm.
Maybe she ought to have grabbed the fire poker on her way out. Better still, she probably ought to just get out now and leave him to it. He sounded normal enough, but who knew? And smelling great was no indication of character. Ben – no, Brad – had smelled heavenly and look what a tosser he’d turned out to be.
Her imagination took off again, her head filling with images not unlike those that were splattered across her canvases only with her as the subject matter. She was just about to leg it when the airbags were free and he was shoving them onto the passenger seat and – thankfully – stowing the knife.
While she let out a quick sigh of relief, he turned the key in the ignition. The engine spluttered. Died. He swore. Tried again. And again. But nothing happened, and it began to dawn on her that he – and consequently they, since she could hardly leave him out here to succumb to hypothermia – could be in quite a pickle.
“Do you have a mobile that works?” he muttered, fiddling with something beneath the steering wheel.
She shook her head and not for the first time it struck her just how isolated the cottage was. It hadn’t bothered her before, in fact she’d actively welcomed it, but now when she needed to be practical she had to admit it wasn’t ideal. “Nope. Sorry,” she said. “No signal anyway. Too remote.”
“Remote is an understatement.”
“What are you looking for?”
“The fuel cut-off switch. It would have flipped when the airbags deployed.”
As she watched him rummage around in the depths of the footwell she decided there really was something very attractive about a man who knew his way round a car. Once, when she and Ben/Brad had been out on what in hindsight had been a rather furtive visit to a local restaurant, they’d had a puncture and had had to call for roadside assistance.
She had no idea what she was basing it on but she got the impression that this man would simply haul out the jack and the spare wheel and get on with it. He wouldn’t care about dirt on his jeans or oil on his hands. And she’d bet her favourite charcoal set that he’d never been near a manicurist in his life.
Evidently having found what he was looking for, he straightened back up and tensed, inhaling sharply as if in pain. Although she could only see his profile he looked as though he was wincing, which made her wonder if, despite both his claims to the contrary and his apparent lucidity, he wasn’t all that OK.
“Are you hurt?” she asked, filling with concern and alarm because what if he had cracked some ribs or had a collapsed lung or something? What would she do then?
“I’ll live.”
He tried the ignition again, twice, but still to no avail. “Damn.”
He rubbed his hands over his face and pressed his fingers to his temples and Stella wondered: what were the signs of concussion? “Did you pass out when you crashed?” she asked.
“No.”
“What day is it?”
“Friday.”
“Month?”
“January.”
“Date?”
“The twenty-seventh.”
“How many fingers am I holding up?”
He glanced up into the rear-view mirror then, and their eyes met and held, and for one brief bizarre moment Stella couldn’t move. She couldn’t look away. She could barely even breathe. The bottom seemed to be falling out of her stomach and her heart seemed to be pounding in her ears and, oh heavens, now she was getting dizzy.
“Four,” he muttered with a dark sort of scowl, and all she could think was four what? Four what?
And then he looked away, shattering the connection, and she snapped back only to realise that like a fool she was still holding up her hand.
“Right,” she muttered, lowering it.
“I’m fine.”
He might be, but she wasn’t. What had that been? Had she taken a bang to the head? It couldn’t be attraction, surely? Not from just one look into a pair of albeit lovely deep dark brown eyes. That would be all kinds of absurd.
Swallowing hard, she forced herself to focus. “So what are you doing up here?” she asked. “Are you lost?”
“No.”
“Sightseeing?”
“No.”
“Then…?”
He turned his head and fixed her with those eyes of his, and once again her stomach swooped alarmingly because he was absolutely gorgeous in a tough, rugged, unsmiling kind of a way. His face was all perfect planes and angles, and suddenly – horrifyingly – she could see herself leaning forwards, threading her fingers through his thick dark hair and pressing her mouth to his, all of which seemed to suggest that yes, crazy as it seemed, this was attraction.
Not that she would ever act on it, of course. Not only would it be hideously inappropriate, if there was one thing she’d learned from what had happened with Ben/Brad it was that it would be a cold day in hell before she went anywhere near a man again. Which did kind of put a kibosh on the whole marriage-and-family thing she’d always dreamed of, but who needed the heartache? She certainly didn’t. She didn’t need anything. Or anyone. And that was a good thing too since she was obviously still totally ill-equipped for a relationship, or any kind of actual, long-term commitment for that matter. She was on her own. Again. And she’d be fine. In fact, she was fine.
Nevertheless, whoever this man might be he was rather, well, magnetically compelling.
“I’m looking for you, Miss Grant,” he said, brutally cutting into her thoughts and making her pulse skip a beat.
“Me?” she said, blinking in astonishment as apprehension began to filter through her. “How do you know who I am? How did you find me?”
“I had someone track you down.”
What the hell? “Why?”
“I want answers.”
“To what sort of questions?”
“What sort of questions do you bloody well think?”
“I genuinely have no idea,” she said, baffled by more than just the conversation. Like why was he having this effect on her? She’d never been so immediately, so strongly attracted to anyone, let alone a stranger. It was bizarre. And highly inconvenient if she was going to have to put him up for the night. “Who on earth are you?”
“Jack Maclean,” he said, and she momentarily ignored the weird goings-on inside her to rack her brains and scour her memory, but try as she might, she came up with nothing. She didn’t know a Jack Maclean. She didn’t know any Macleans. Except –
Oh.
Shit.
As realisation dawned Stella felt the blood drain from her face and the pulsing heat inside her dissipate, and then it was as if the sides of the car were closing in on her, squeezing out the air and making it difficult to breathe.
She did know who he was. She’d stumbled across him in the
aftermath of New Year’s Eve while obsessively, compulsively googling Cora, the woman whose fiancé she’d misguidedly dated. Jack Maclean was Cora’s older brother, a hotshot currency trader with his own company and billions in the bank. From what she remembered from the article she’d skimmed through he was a force to be reckoned with. In the pursuit of his goals he was single-minded and relentless. And now he was here. On a mission. For what was clearly going to be quite a while.
Bollocks.
Taking a deep breath, Stella braced herself for the battle that was undoubtedly coming her way since he was hardly here for a chat about the weather, and said, “We’d better go inside.”
*
Smothering a curse as pain stabbed him in the chest, Jack eased himself out of the driver’s seat, locked the car and set off in Stella’s wake, frustrated and aching and even more unsettled than was usual for this time of year.
Up until that sodding sheep had forced him off the road everything had been going exactly according to plan. When his sister had confessed a week ago that she was going insane not knowing anything about the ‘scheming, brazen, engagement-wrecking bitch harlot’ who’d seduced her fiancé he’d offered to remedy the situation. He’d had to do something. He was climbing the walls and Cora was in pieces.
So he’d hired an old school friend who now ran a company that had an investigations arm to, among other things, locate the ‘she-devil’ – his sister’s words. This morning, with the information fresh in his in-box, he had taken the jet to Inverness. On arrival he’d climbed into the Land Rover that had been waiting for him at the bottom of the aircraft’s steps and embarked on the uncomfortable drive to the remote cottage in the Highlands where Stella was said to be hiding out.
He’d envisaged a relatively quick trip. When he’d left at dawn he’d imagined being back at his apartment in Mayfair in time for a late dinner. But thanks to a sheep with a death wish that plan had gone to hell, and now he was stuck, in this godforsaken place, with a woman he despised and who ought not to be as strikingly, heart-stoppingly attractive as she was.