The Witch Of Stonecliff. Dawn Brown
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“Sorry to have kept you waiting.” Warlow waved Peirs into the seat next to her before lowering himself back into the chair behind the desk. “Miss James had some concerns.”
“I hope your concerns have been alleviated.” Peirs glanced at her owl-eyed, a faint smile pulling at his mouth.
“They have not,” she snapped, drawing a hard scowl from Warlow. The younger man’s grin widened.
“Please forgive Eleri,” Warlow ground out. “She’s under a great deal of pressure just now.”
“Of course,” Peirs said to Warlow, but his gaze remained fixed on her. “Who could blame her for being careful?”
Money or not, letting to this man was a mistake. “So you’ve heard then, about the bodies in the bog? Twelve men.”
He nodded. “I should imagine everyone’s heard.”
The truth in his words iced her blood. Good God, this was so much worse than the last time she’d caught the media’s attention.
She drew in a deep breath, hardening herself against the panic building inside her. “I have to wonder why in the world you’d willingly stay knowing that.”
“I had my eye on Morehead Lodge before your unfortunate discovery, but had some loose ends to tie up first. “ Kyle smiled. “You have the agreement for me to sign?”
Warlow nodded and slid a thin stack of papers toward him. “I believe you’ve already had the chance to review the lease.”
“I have.” He accepted the pen Warlow held out and scribbled his signature on the last page.
Eleri sat next to him, dismissed and forgotten. Dull anger beat behind her forehead. These two men, doing as they pleased, suiting themselves. Warlow after the money and Peirs after the lodge. But it was her life teetering on the edge of ruin.
“You’re a writer, aren’t you?” Eleri asked.
Kyle glanced at her before turning back to initialling the lease. “That’s right. If you’re worried I’m here after a story, you needn’t. I’m a fiction writer.”
“Really? Would I have read anything you’ve written?”
“Unlikely. This has been a recent career change.”
Her gaze narrowed. “Before this career change, what did you do?”
He pushed the signed lease to Warlow. “I was a technical writer for an electronics company. Quite dull, really.”
She didn’t believe a word he said. He was too smug. Too smooth. Too unperturbed by all that was happening around them.
“I can see you’re not convinced,” Kyle said, a light chuckle touching his low, gravelly voice. “Tell you what. Why don’t you come with me, show me the way to the lodge? I’ll tell you everything you’ll ever need to know about me, and hopefully set your mind at ease.”
Eleri nipped at the corner of her mouth, giving his offer serious thought. Not because anything the man could say would sway her opinion, but perhaps something she’d say would sway his. “All right.”
“Excellent idea,” Warlow cut in. “We could all benefit by knowing our tenant better. You’ll no doubt be busy getting settled tonight, but perhaps you’d join us for dinner tomorrow evening?”
For the first time since she’d met him, Kyle’s smug expression fell away, leaving his features blank. Warlow’s offer had caught the man completely off guard. The whole thing might have been funny, had she not suspected her own face looked remarkably similar.
What the hell was Warlow doing? The less they had to do with this man, the better. Yet he was inviting him for a meal? Perhaps he’d forgotten Brynn was away just now, forcing them to eat the housekeeper’s cooking.
She’d add dinner to the list of things to warn Kyle off. After all, he might not get the chance to wind up dead at the bottom of a bog if he succumbed to food poisoning first.
* * *
Kyle stared at the white-haired man behind the desk, not sure how to the respond to his offer. In reality, returning to the main house—invited in, no less—was exactly what he wanted and yet something about this man’s invitation left him uneasy.
Oh bloody hell, who was he fooling? His stomach had been in knots the moment he’d crossed the bridge from the mainland onto the Isle of Anglesey in Northern Wales. His fragmented memories flashed across his brain like a confused silent film.
He was exhausted. Even the light cat and mouse game with Eleri was wearing on him. He needed to get the hell out of there. “Thank you, I’d be happy to.”
Eleri snorted beside him, but Kyle didn’t glance at her, his attention fixed on Hugh Warlow. He’d swear something glinted in the older man’s pale blue gaze. The hair at the back of his neck prickled. Did he know him? Recognize him from before?
Warlow handed him the keys and a copy of the lease. “There is one more thing, and I hope you don’t find me deplorably rude. I couldn’t help but notice your injury.”
Kyle went cold. Absently, almost without control, his fingers moved to the thick ridge of scar tissue peeking out from his collar.
“I was in an accident.” The gravel rasp in his voice seemed more pronounced all of a sudden and a thin line of sweat dribbled between his shoulder blades.
Warlow’s eyes tightened. “Must have been a terrible recovery.”
Months of painful recovery and the black fear he lived with since that day swirled inside his head. “It’s behind me now.”
“Yes, of course. I won’t keep you.” Warlow waved him away, sinking into the chair behind the desk.
Kyle turned from the man, his gaze shifting to Eleri. She’d moved to the door, watching him with narrow-eyed curiosity. The hostility tightening her features had gone. Good God, he must have looked as rattled as he felt.
He forced a grin. “Shall we be off, then?”
Eleri nodded and left the study. Kyle followed her outside, letting out the breath he’d been holding. He’d made it through. Whatever suspicions they had about him weren’t enough to keep them from accepting his money. He hadn’t even really had to lie yet. For all their reservations, they had never thought to ask if he’d ever visited Stonecliff or Cragera Bay before.
But maybe they remembered him and already knew he had.
Chapter Two
“Get in,” Kyle said, yanking open his car’s passenger door. Nervous energy hummed through him, making his skin itch.
Eleri didn’t move, eyeing the opening like a wary animal gauging a potential trap. “You want me in your car?”