Page 27 of Sadie’s Highlander (Highland Protector #1)
CHAPTER 26
“ I f ye willna let me in to see her, I shall sit right here until she comes outside.” Alec plopped down in the porch rocker and drummed his fingers on the cold, damp armrests. He’d been trying to corner Sadie for two days now, and Lore-a-mighty the woman was more elusive than the slyest fox. And he’d be damned straight to hell if Mistress Martha wasn’t helping Sadie avoid him. Whose side was the meddling old woman on?
Miss Martha shrugged from behind the screen door and pulled her wool scarf higher around her neck. “Suit yourself. Freeze your ass off out here on the front porch.” As she pulled the main door to, she chuckled and spoke through the screen again. “I’m sure it’ll make your mother very proud to discover she’s raised a son too stupid to realize that houses have back doors too.”
“Dammit.” Alec glared at the front door of the bed-and-breakfast as it bumped shut, the curtains and blinds behind its glass swaying from side to side as if mocking him too. The span of three days since the incident had been a long, painful separation from Sadie and he’d given the confused lass all the space he could stand to give her. ’Twas time this foolishness ended and Sadie returned to him, back where she belonged.
“I kent ye had a back door too!” he shouted at the closed door. He’d just figured that since the weather had turned so bitter cold, Sadie wouldn’t take the long way through the sleet and snow to get to the job he’d found out she had at the café. And why the hell had Delilah Morrow given Sadie a job washing dishes? It was like the entire town had turned against him, trying to help Sadie strike out on her own and leave Brady. Damn Southerners. Worse about taking in strays and sticking together than any clan of Highlanders.
“Alec!”
A shout from the street interrupted his fuming. “Now what?” he muttered, jerking about to find the person unwise enough to speak to him right now.
Grant rolled down the window of the utility truck, squinting against the sleet and snow gusting in his face. “Come. Dwyn, Mistress Lydia, and Máthair said to bring ye to the boardroom immediately. Get in afore we all catch our death in this wicked weather.”
“What do they want?” Alec didn’t move. Instead, he looked past Grant and directed his question to his brother Ramsay watching him from behind the steering wheel.
“Why the hell are ye asking him? I’m the one sent to fetch ye,” Grant said.
“Because ye lie every time yer lips move and I’m in no mood for yer games.” Alec stomped down the steps and to the street, navigating the slippery sidewalk with the agility of a Highland goat. He shoved his hood back from his face, yanked open the door of the truck, and stuck his head inside. “What the hell do they want, Ramsay? The truth, mind ye.”
Ramsay shrugged and nudged an elbow toward Grant. “It’s as he says. They didna get into the particulars with us. Just said we were to bring ye. Now.”
“Shove over.” Alec pushed Grant, moving him across the truck seat a bit faster. He slid in beside his brother, slammed the door shut, then rolled up the window. “It’s never good when those three put their heads together.”
“It’s even worse than that,” Ramsay said as he carefully steered the truck over the ever-slickening road. “I heard them say something about instructions or some such from Mistress Martha.”
Mistress Martha. Alec’s gut tightened. That could only mean one thing. This meeting had something to do with his Sadie. He motioned toward the road. “Can ye not go any faster?”
“Not in this mess,” Ramsay snorted. “Can ye not see the ice building on the road?”
After what seemed like forever, Ramsay finally parked the truck in front of the public keep housing the boardroom to Highland Life and Legends. Alec shouldered open the truck door, then hurriedly slipped and slid his way into the building. One hand on the door, he turned back to his brothers just getting out of the truck. “Get with Frank and get some salt spread before someone falls and breaks their neck.”
“The park’s closed,” Grant argued.
“Aye,” Ramsay chimed in. “There’s no one about.”
“The maintenance crew is still here and so are a few of the ladies that work in the shops over the holidays. I’ll not have anyone hurt because of our laziness. Now off wi’ ye. Do as I say.” Alec waited. He was in no mood to be crossed and if his brothers valued their hides, they’d not argue again.
Grant and Ramsay shot him dark looks icier than the weather but didn’t say another word. Instead, they got back in the truck and headed out to follow Alec’s instructions.
Alec strode inside, shaking his coat free of moisture and stomping the slush off his boots. Shrugging off his coat, he tossed it across one of the benches in the hallway. The closer he got to the boardroom, the more he felt as though he was walking into a trap. Dwyn plotting alone was never a good thing, but Dwyn plotting with three old women could be deadly.
The three of them stood at the end of the room, in front of the whiteboard, behind the long boardroom table. Alec thumped the door closed, his senses tensed. He was about to be ambushed. He could feel it in his bones.
Dwyn, his mother, and Miss Lydia turned in unison—their expressions confirming Alec’s suspicions. Best get this over and done . He took a deep breath and strode toward them. It was always better to meet a battle head-on. “Ye summoned me?”
“ Summoned is such a harsh word, son.” Sarinda smiled, the caring motherly smile she always assumed when preparing to give one of her children guidance that they’d best not ignore—not if they valued their arse.
“What’s this about?” Alec remained on the other side of the table, planting both hands atop one of the straight-backed leather chairs. He dug his fingers into the leather, holding tight. This conversation could be one hell of a ride.
“Martha sent word that Sadie bought a bus ticket.” Miss Lydia stepped forward, scowling at him as though it were his fault. “Some place in Texas. The farthest she could go with what little money she had.”
Panic slammed into him like a hammer to his chest. “When?”
“She bought it yesterday. The bus leaves early Saturday morning.” Miss Lydia pecked a gnarled arthritic finger on the table. “You better get your ass in gear, boy. You’re about to lose her.”
Alec threw the chair aside, stomped forward, and leaned across the table. “I have been getting me arse in gear , but yer damn sister has been helping Sadie avoid me!”
“No, she hasn’t!” Miss Lydia met him across the table, her nose nearly touching his. “She’s just been making it look that way so Sadie wouldn’t get suspicious about whose side she was on.”
“Calm down. Calm down.” Dwyn gently pulled Miss Lydia back while at the same time giving Alec a narrow-eyed glare. “Shouting and fighting amongst ourselves willna get this problem solved. It takes a cool head to plan a successful battle.”
“I agree,” Sarinda chimed in. “Dwyn and I have been discussing this issue for quite some time.” She gave Alec a disapproving look. “We talked at length while ye were locked in yer office cooling down.” She lifted her chin and smugly folded her arms across her chest. “I believe we’ve come up with quite the promising solution, and all the details are finally in place.”
Alec backed up a step, forcing himself to control the urge to saddle his horse, grab Sadie up, and ride off with her into the mountains. “I’m listening,” he said, amazed he sounded so much calmer than he felt. “What is this plan?”
Dwyn began the pacing that always signaled the advisor was excited about what he was about to share. A sly smile lit up his face and twinkled in his eyes. “As Sarinda and I see it, there are several issues we must help Sadie overcome before she’ll allow herself to return to ye. Even if ye’d been able to talk with her earlier and tempt her into coming back, the woman has many demons to exorcise before the two of ye could be truly happy. The goddesses have shown me so, and ye ken they’re never wrong.”
“Go on,” Alec said, shifting in place to keep his tension in check.
“That girl needs to realize that what her sister did wasn’t her fault,” Miss Lydia interjected. She shook her head with a sharp jerk, a murderous scowl puckering her face. “Sadie could no more control that bitch than I can control the weather.”
“True,” Dwyn said, regaining the floor. “But that’s just one of the lass’s demons.” He smiled kindly at Miss Lydia and motioned for her to step back and let him do the talking.
Miss Lydia pursed her lips tightly shut and stepped back.
Dwyn turned back to Alec. “Sadie must also learn that ye dinna believe she was responsible either and that ye admire her for the fine, strong woman she is.”
“Aye,” Alec agreed. “I’ve been trying to get to her to tell her that and more.”
“ Telling her will not make her believe it in her heart.” When Alec started to speak, Dwyn held up a hand for silence. “The root cause, the main issue we must repair to win Sadie back . . .” Dwyn paused for dramatic effect, the long, drawn-out minute making Alec want to lunge across the table and shake him. “Is Sadie’s inability to believe in herself and truly know that she’s worthy of being loved.” Dwyn stepped forward, slowly nodding as though everything was suddenly quite clear. “And Miss Lydia, Sarinda, and I have come up with just the plan that will set her well on the path to healing.”
“The bus leaves Saturday.” Alec swallowed hard. The thought of Sadie riding that damn bus out of his life nearly choked him. “We’ve got but two days to set this plan of yers in motion. Can it be done in time?”
“Aye.” Dwyn smiled, then turned and winked at both the ladies, who currently looked as though they were about to burst with the delicious secret they shared. “We didna think ye’d mind, so we took the liberty of setting things in motion. Now you and I need to hie up to our rooms to pack a few bags for our trip.”