After one last giggle, the waitress shoved her pad into the waist of her apron and skirted her way back toward the bar.
Nessa decided Trish might as well go ahead, vault over the bar and jump on Gabriel’s body the way she was ogling him and waving every five minutes. She wondered if the waitress would be willing to find her a bucket of ice water to dump on Trish’s head.
“It’s a long walk back to the inn,” Nessa warned as she drummed her fingers on the table.
“Oh, lighten up, Nessa,” Trish chided with a grin as she raised her glass to her lips. Sitting taller in her chair as though she were a cat about to pounce upon a mouse, Trish pointed across the room at a couple just arriving. “Isn’t that the couple from Balnakiel who gave us directions our first day here?” Swiveling in her seat, Nessa studied their faces, then nodded in agreement. “That’s them. I wonder if they’ve gotten their shop open for business yet. The purple globe they had was fascinating. Remember? The one that nearly vibrated off the shelf and was full of the laser lights?”
Nessa caught their eye and waved hello. There was just something about those two she had liked. The couple smiled and returned waves of their own. They put their heads together for just a moment and then scooted from their seats. They made their way over to Trish and Nessa’s table, smiling as they wove their way between the surrounding chairs.
“I see ye found your way back to Durness. How have ye been enjoying your stay?” With a polite bow toward Trish and Nessa, as he spoke, Brodie unconsciously pulled Fiona closer to his side. His arm rested protectively around her waist as he shot a narrow-eyed glance in the direction of the bar.
A shiver of happiness thrilled its way up her spine. Nessa couldn’t resist a heartfelt sigh. “It’s so beautiful here. I feel like I’ve come home. If it were up to me, I’d stay in Scotland forever.” She struggled to ignore the pang of jealousy at the obvious bond the married couple shared. She wished she could find the type of closeness Fiona and Brodie had found. Even though friends and co-workers surrounded her, Nessa always found herself isolated…so alone. It was hard to resign herself to the fact that she’d probably be single all her life. Nessa tried to console herself with the knowledge that at least she’d made it to the land of her dreams.
Fiona smiled and snuggled closer to her husband. “By the way, we didna introduce ourselves the other day. My name is Fiona and this is my husband, Brodie. Would ye mind if we joined ye? Sat with ye for a while?” Fiona turned and looked about the pub. “We came here tonight at the insistence of an artisan we’ve been seeking to join our shop. But it looks like they’ve stood us up again. Ye will probably think we’re quite the country couple, but we love listening to the way ye speak and would love to hear more about the USA.”
“Sure, pull up a chair. Trish and I decided to come here tonight with the hopes of making a few new friends.” Nessa and Trish scooted to make room for the couple at their table.
Trish motioned with her glass in Gabriel’s direction as he stood filling glasses at the bar. “I’ve found my new best friend right over there. I’m just waiting until after dinner tonight to make my introductions.”
Fiona’s face paled. She took a deep breath, then took a sip of her ale. “Aye, Mr. Gabriel Burns is plenty easy on the eyes. But take care, Trish. A beautiful veneer sometimes hides something rotten beneath the surface.”
Brodie brought Fiona’s hand to his lips and gazed into her troubled eyes. “Careful now, lass. Ye had best be remembering ye’re a MacKay now and your eyes should not be traveling anywhere but here.”
Nessa worried with the corner of her napkin as she stared down at her plate. She couldn’t help it.
Their closeness was really getting to her tonight. She tried staunching her growing envy at the couple’s bond. She hated herself for not being happy for them and the special closeness they had found. Nessa toyed with the food left on her plate and tried to think of something to say. Wait a minute? Did they say their name was MacKay? Nessa fumbled with her silverware and barely kept it from crashing to the floor. That name kept cropping up.
“MacKay? Did you say your last name is MacKay?”
“Aye.” Fiona nodded, glancing over at Brodie as she added, “Do ye know the name? Are ye familiar with any of the family’s history? Or any of the clan legends of lost loves or curses, perhaps?”
Nessa frowned with a shake of her head. An unexplainable stab of uneasiness nagged at her chest. “No. The name MacKay seems to be popping up in a lot of my paperwork of late.”
Brodie almost choked as he drained his glass. He fixed his wife with a warning look as he lowered his glass to the table. “Paperwork? If ye don’t mind my asking, what exactly is your business here in Durness?”
With a theatrical groan, Trish shook her head as she moved her plate and pounded her fist on the table. “I’ll sum it all up in a nutshell. Nessa is a professor of archeology and we’re here on a grant to study the Durness sites and the history around Balnakiel. But I’m begging you, please don’t get her started on Scotland’s history or her career or we won’t hear a word about anything but work tonight. It’s the weekend. It’s time to relax!”
“Excuse me.” Their waitress for the night stood by the table with a gloriously sinful chocolate dessert in her hands. “Mr. Burns asked that I bring this to the lovely lady. He said she looked to be one who might enjoy a bit of a sweet indulgence.”
With a victorious chortle, Trish cocked a brow at Nessa and reached across the table toward the rich dessert. Her smile faded, when the waitress raised the plate out of her reach and mouthed the words,Not for you.
The waitress nodded toward Nessa and set the plate in front of her. “Not meaning to hurt anyone’s feelings but Mr. Gabriel was verra clear. The dessert is for the wee blue-eyed lass. The one with the rosy cheeks that show everything she’s feeling.”
Her mouth dropped open in surprise as Nessa glanced around the table. One hand fluttered to her throat, as she imagined the decadence of the sweet delight. Glancing from the cake to the waitress’s face, Nessa fixed her with a doubting glare. “Is this some sort of joke? Are you sure he didn’t mean the dessert for my friend, Trish?”
A deep rich voice rumbled just behind her as she stared down at the plate. “Why are ye so surprised? Surely, ye don’t fear a wee bit of chocolate that canna be nearly as sweet as yourself?” Gabriel had appeared out of nowhere and nudged a chair beside Nessa’s seat. “My name is Gabriel. But ye already knew that since Cordelia’s never kept a secret in her life.”
With a giggle, Cordelia placed a fork beside the plate in front of Nessa and nudged Gabriel with her ample hip. “Ye said ye like it when I give the pretty ones your name. Don’t feign the put-upon boss routine with me!” She pulled her notepad from her apron and stuffed their tab in Gabriel’s shirt pocket before moving on to take the next table’s order.
Gabriel clapped Brodie on the shoulder a bit hard and greeted him with a stiff nod. A flicker of malice sparked in his eyes as if the polite smile strained his face. “And you! Ye have a lot of nerve showing up in my place after stealing this fine woman out from under my verra nose.”
Fiona trembled and edged closer to Brodie as she curled her hands to her chest. “I intend to be sure Nessa knows she’d best be running in the opposite direction from the likes of a cur like you!”
Gabriel’s eyes narrowed just a flicker; his smile cooled a bit as he tilted his head. “Now, Fiona. I thought we agreed it would be best for all concerned if we considered the past over and done. Admit it, my lost love: we’re all better off putting those days behind us.”
Brodie edged forward, leveling Gabriel with a cold and deadly glare. He scooped one of Fiona’s hands in his own as he leaned farther across the table. His jaw clenched, there was no missing his meaning as his lips curled into a disdainful sneer. “The past is over but it will never be forgotten. Ye would do well to bear that in mind.”
Nessa watched this interplay. A great wrong had happened between these three. She didn’t know what but from the malevolence hovering in the air, it must have been pretty serious. Nessa nudged Trish underneath the table. Do something, she mouthed.