Mcgillivray's Mistress. Anne McAllister

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a matter of opinion. Why there?”

      “It’s a public beach.”

      “There are three miles of public beach.”

      “I can put it anywhere I want.”

      “Exactly. And you wanted to put it in front of the Moonstone.”

      “So?” Fiona lifted her chin. “You should be glad,” she told him. “I’m raising the artistic consciousness of your guests.”

      He snorted. “Right. You’re saving them from standard brands, aren’t you?” He made it sound like she was an idiot.

      Fiona wrapped her arms across her chest. “That’s one way of putting it,” she said loftily.

      “Another way is saying you’re draining away the life blood of the island economy,” Lachlan told her.

      “I am not! I would never hurt the island!” Trust a jerk like Lachlan McGillivray to completely misunderstand the whole reason behind her efforts. “This is my home,” she told him. “I was the one who was born here! I’m the one who’s never left!”

      “And that makes you better than everyone else?”

      “Of course not.”

      “Just better than me.”

      “You hate it here,” she reminded him.

      “Hated it,” he corrected her. “Hell’s bells, Fiona. I was fifteen years old. I’d been dragged away from my home to some godforsaken island in the middle of the ocean. I missed my friends. I missed playing soccer. I didn’t want to be here!”

      She pressed her lips together, resisting his words. Of course they made sense now, as they hadn’t back then. Back then she’d taken them personally, as she’d taken everything Lachlan McGillivray had done personally.

      “Even so,” she said stubbornly. “You didn’t have to come back.”

      “I wanted to come back.”

      But she didn’t want him back! She was over Lachlan McGillivray! At least she’d thought she was—until that night he’d taken her to Beaches.

      “And I’m staying,” he went on inexorably. “Whether you like it or not, I’m here and the Moonstone’s here, and we’re going to stay.”

      “I don’t care if the Moonstone is here. I’m glad it’s here!” At least she would have been if Lachlan weren’t the one running it. And as for Lachlan staying, she doubted that.

      Lachlan was glitz-and-glamour personified. He’d lived in England, in Italy, in Spain. He’d dined with kings and dated supermodels. He was not the sort of man to settle down on a tiny out-of-the-way Caribbean island.

      She just wished he would hurry up and leave!

      And he could obviously read her mind. Slowly Lachlan shook his head. “I’m not going anywhere, babe. But that sculpture is.”

      Fiona’s jaw tightened. Her chin thrust out. “No.”

      “Look, Fiona, I can take a joke as well as the next guy, but…”

      “It’s not a joke!”

      Lachlan rolled his eyes, then looked pointedly at the pair of red bikini panties in her hand.

      Instinctively Fiona’s fingers tightened around them.

      “I found them,” she said stubbornly. “On the beach. Fortuitous, I admit. But I didn’t use anything that I didn’t find. That’s the challenge of it, don’t you see?”

      Obviously he didn’t. He was looking flinty and stubborn, glowering the way he always glowered at opponents on the soccer pitch.

      “It’s a challenge,” she repeated.

      “I don’t need any more challenges, thank you very much.”

      “Not to you. To me!”

      “What’s that supposed to mean?”

      Fiona wetted her lips. She hadn’t put it into words before, hadn’t dared. It seemed presumptuous even now. She wasn’t a sculptor. Not really. She’d never had classes, never studied with anyone. What she did with her shells and sand and steel was craft, not art. But she was fascinated with it. “It’s…teaching me things.”

      “Trash is teaching you things?” he said mockingly. “What? Recycling?”

      “Composition. Balance. Development. Flexibility. Imagination.” She tried to think of all the abstract artistic terms she could use to explain the things that her nighttime creation had been teaching her.

      “Yeah, right.”

      It didn’t take any imagination at all to know that Lachlan didn’t believe a word of it.

      “It’s what I do,” she said desperately. “I make those little sculptures to sell to the tourists. I cut out metal. I cast sand. I glue rocks. But that’s not all I want to do. I want to be a sculptor,” she whispered. “A real one.”

      It wasn’t something she had ever admitted before. Hadn’t dared to. And she felt like an imposter when she said it now. It had been her dream, of course, long ago—when she’d still had dreams. Once upon a time she’d even thought she might go away to study.

      But that had been years ago. Before her father’s stroke. Since then she’d been on the island. She’d worked with what the island gave her, learned what it had to teach her. And didn’t ask for more.

      “You could go back to it,” her brother Mike had told her after their dad had passed away.

      “You ought to,” her brother Paul had encouraged. “Apply for a course somewhere.”

      But Fiona had shaken her head. “I’m too old. I have a life right here.”

      “You need to do something,” both her brothers had told her. “Dad would want you to. He wouldn’t want to think you’d given up everything for him.”

      “I didn’t!” she protested. “I wanted to take care of him.”

      “And you did,” Mike said soothingly. “And God knows we all appreciate it. But now you can move on.”

      It had been three months since her dad’s death and she hadn’t moved on at all. She’d been grieving, she told herself. She needed time. And a challenge.

      The sculpture on the beach had been that challenge. It had brought her to life again. And if it had annoyed Lachlan, well, that had been an added benefit.

      “You want to be a sculptor?” Lachlan said doubtfully now.

      “Yes.”

      His hard blue gaze narrowed on her. “And that’s what your monstrosity is?

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