Sneak Peek of the final installment in our Highland Legends series
Found in Flame and Moonlight
Eight minutes was all Chelsea Smith had. All she needed. Hopefully.
The heavy wooden door to Professor MacLaren’s private office snicked closed behind her. With a subtle suggestion from her mind, the tumblers reengaged within its lock, a deadbolt she’d “picked” with similar mental ease mere seconds ago.
On her next inhale of cooler undisturbed air, the distinctive scents of age washed over her: that certain spice of centuries-old leather, a mustiness of layered dust, the sweetness of yellowing paper in a prized collection of ancient books.
The room’s furnishings echoed its owner’s passion for antiquities. Within a sizable entry, a vintage coffee-colored Chesterfield sofa with matching wingchairs hovered at the edge of a burgundy-and-gold Aubusson carpet. Along the side and far wall, relics from exotic locales perched from various niches between precisely stacked scholarly tomes in massive bookcases. And beyond a sizable polished wood desk and its stately leather chair, within tall display cases that flanked a large window, treasured discoveries from historic digs rested on glass shelves.
Yet one particular artifact stood apart from the rest. The sole reason for her break-in. And the item occupied the nearest corner of his polished wood desk, exposed. No bookcase niche. No protective case.
“Such unfathomable power,” Chelsea murmured toward the rectangular object, at once fascinated and intrigued. More than she’d been about anything in her first twenty-two years of an immortal life hiding-in-plain sight among “normal” humans.
Her excitement even eclipsed what she’d witnessed from the other side of that window while walking to MacLaren’s lecture less than an hour ago.
Though her mind still reeled about that discovery as well.
Because something very not human had stood near that power-drenched box, partially transparent, as if not fully materialized into the human world. And that shirtless muscular something had resembled artistic depictions of male angelic warriors, only skewed darker and more sinister with its dusky olive skin, inky black wings, and blue-green prismatic eyes.
And the enigmatic creature had stared directly at her, eyes narrowing, puzzlement twisting his sharp features as Chelsea blatantly stared back. He’d seemed surprised. That she could detect him? Or perhaps that their paths had intersected in the first place.
Yet inside the professor’s locked office, no sign of the dark angel remained.
Seven minutes.
The forceful vibration of the artifact’s unique power was what had caught her attention from the other side of the window. It had radiated an exhilarating and complex energy, beckoning her like a siren’s call.
“Invitation accepted,” she whispered.
With slow breaths, Chelsea banked her excitement. Not hard to achieve. Her kind, further evolved humans, born-and-bred assassins, had been trained through millennia to suppress emotion.
“Yeah.” She let out a soft snort. “Look how well that turned out.”
Members of her race had recently evolved again. And an underground faction had organically formed. One that no longer sought to squelch their emotions. That strong minority yearned for something greater, a deeper meaning to their eternal life.
Months ago, Chelsea had been secretly contacted by them. The founders had detected her tendency to operate on the fringe of acceptability. Of course, she’d joined their cause without hesitation.
In the hours and days following that pivotal decision, she’d eased the cognitive restraints that had hobbled her. They had warned her that she would suffer unimaginable internal struggle. Yet nothing had prepared her for the cascade of emotions. One in particular had caused an enormous dissonance with her inherited vocation.
Empathy had bled into her black-and-white world.
An assassin’s world.
And that problematic emotion had caused a thunderstorm of chaotic gray.
Six minutes.
Focus, Chelsea. She took measured steps toward the charged artifact, noting its unusual features. A foot long, half that wide and tall, a rectangular box sat encased in layers of elaborate metallic latticework. The gleaming designs that adorned its corners and edges were comprised of various metals from differing artistry. But beneath those ornate motifs, simpler flat sides were fashioned from a beautiful bluish-silver metal with a slight sparkle to its sheen.
Indirect bright light glowed in from the large window, but as Chelsea approached, an aura of energy haloed around the box. Infinitesimal particles glittered beyond its surfaces, flashes of silver and gold visible to her preternatural eyes.
Five minutes.
Which meant MacLaren’s lecture in his beloved Advanced Theories in Archaeology had concluded. Earlier, Chelsea had obediently endured the graduate-level course with fifteen other classmates until she’d politely excused herself at the last and most opportune moment. A correct amount of respectful time from a valued student. The perfect window of plausible deniability should her burglary plans go awry.
Students typically waylaid him after his lectures, but to be certain, she extended her superhuman hearing. Down a wide sidewalk between buildings, across a grassy quad, and into the cozy window-lined room that the tenured professor claimed as his own, she detected the voices of eager students who had indeed detained him. Which enabled him to wax eloquent about the week’s series and his latest obsession: prehistoric artifacts handed down by gods, breadcrumbs to the secrets of mysterious civilizations.
“But you’ve been keeping the biggest secret of all right here in your office, haven’t you?” Chelsea murmured as she paused within reach of the object.
Four minutes.
Plenty of time to abort, to walk away without detection.
“I don’t need to be here.” Sound reason.
And yet, need had become relative.
For in the months following her recent evolution, an undefinable hunger had begun to grow that nothing satisfied. A craving for a deeper purpose. Not the deadly one mandated by her ancestry. Not even the glimmer of hope that her emerging faction offered.
“Something personal,” she murmured, staring at the box. She’d been hunting a cause that matched her sudden passion for life. Unique and special. Sparked by her newfound awakening. “Worthy. And all my own.”
Because every action she’d taken in life, from actual missions to basic periphery cover, had been by her race’s directive. Even attending university. Particularly MacLaren’s courses.
But for the first time, she operated on her own volition. Because before that morning, she hadn’t been privy to any details of why MacLaren had become a person of interest. Until one shining detail had made itself known, flashing its undeniable energy straight toward her.
Therefore, the risk of exposure? While investigating an object as exceptional as what she hoped to discover about herself?
More than acceptable.
While she continued to listen, the distinct voices of six fellow grad students dwindled to two hardcore disciples. They peppered the professor with questions, theories, and offers of assistance on his next expedition. Groveling, as usual. But MacLaren had their number. And only a couple of minutes remained of his scheduled patience.
Chelsea drew a deep breath to calm her riotous—clearly not suppressed—emotions.
Instinct screamed the intricate box held her destiny. Even if she had no idea why.
But as she took a final step and reached out a hand to touch, its unique power reacted to her proximity with accelerating vibrations of energy—plenty of evidence to back up that gut feeling.
Three minutes.
MacLaren shooed out his fan club with his parting excuses and locked up the classroom.
Right as Chelsea hovered a hand over the artifact.
Energy emanated upward from that bluish-silver top, charging the air with electrons that sizzled and sparked. Warmth bathed her palm. Friendly. Inviting. Intoxicating.
Until a sense of grave danger spiked in those scant inches between the mysterious metal and her skin. And an unfamiliar feeling of trepidation tripped down her spine. Like some cosmic warning.
Chelsea paused, then blinked heavily, thrown by the sudden unfriendliness of the box and her own emotion about it. She wiggled her fingers within the box’s charged aura and considered her impulsive actions. And their unknown ramifications. With the artifact. And MacLaren.
An extensive list of potentialities scrolled through her advanced mind. But the calculations magnified when she removed the laws of the known universe and input alternate realities. Involving energized boxes. And dark angels. And supposedly regular professors that capture the attention of a race of assassins.
Ninety seconds.
“So many possibilities,” she murmured about the upside. Too many variables to calculate.
Chelsea snorted and shook her head with a slight smile. “I’ve never been afraid of anything in my life.” Headlong into the adventure. The only way she saw the world.
The leather heels of MacLaren’s loafers clicked down the nearest sidewalk.
Less than a minute. Before her trespass was discovered.
Urgency fired through her veins. She tensed her arm and lowered her hand, ready to touch no matter the outcome. To finally complete some circuit she’d begun to sense, as if the dark matter hovering between the spaces in the universe needed her help.
The charged air rippled with a stronger dose of caution.
Chelsea narrowed her eyes at the box.
Are you trying to communicate with me?
That the inanimate object had sentience, as opposed to some other force out in the ether, gave her pause. Deadly animals and insects often displayed vivid warnings of their lethal venom.
But why lead me here with such clear invitation? Do you not want me to touch?
The warning vibration wavered back and forth in response as the additional questions crossed her mind. Not quite a yes, not quite a no. That it wanted her there, perhaps. But not to touch? Orrr…
“Not yet?” Barely an inch existed.
A hot glow sparkled into existence between her and the artifact, golden and shimmering. The box’s energy extended an exquisite representation of agreement in its special language.
“Fascinating.” Mesmerizing.
The artifact’s seductive power continued to astound.
Have you taunted MacLaren with such scandalous invitation?
No sooner had she posed the mental question, than an answer rippled forth. Only that message vibrated not from the artifact, but from somewhere out in the ether. No. Crystal clear. Not as any legible word, but a negative in resonance.
The energized box did not wait on that desk for the professor.
At that moment, the artifact existed for a singular purpose: to join its immense power with hers.
MacLaren’s footfalls began to click down the tiles of the building’s corridor.
Energy spiked from the box again. Even while its power rippled another caution: Not yet. The message clearly vibrated from the object, not the ether.
But unraveling the mysteries of a higher consciousnesses in matter and space had to wait.
Adrenaline surged through her. “Out of time.”
Golden sparks fountained up from its metallic top, singeing her palm. Not yet!
“When?” Chelsea choked out a laugh at the box. “After he has campus security cuff me?”
MacLaren’s key slid into the lock.
Her pulse raced, the thump of her heart a drumbeat in her ears.
Now or never! she argued to the unseen gatekeepers.
Tiny clicks echoed as tumblers released in the lock’s mechanism.
The door edge scraped over its frame, the only means of a clean escape swinging open and her window of opportunity closing right along with it.
Half-assed alibies spun through her mind, all utterly ridiculous: I followed a burglar in, I needed to lie down and only your pin-tucked sofa would do, I saw a black-winged angel with sparkling blue-green eyes staring out your window. Voicing that last factoid? Bordered on certifiable insanity.
But at the last split second between clean infiltration and utter discovery—right as her anxiety skyrocketed—a powerful vacuum slammed her hand down that remaining inch.
A scorching current charged up through her palm from the metal. Blinding power and incredible pleasure flashed through her being.
MacLaren’s office vanished.
And a realm of absolute nothingness descended.
***
Gawain Brodie sucked in a stunned breath as the inside of his chest…boomed.
Thunder? Confused, he frowned but refused to break stride. He raced down an earthen footpath in the shadowy forest to rejoin his warriors; he’d been ambushed while scouting. And since no cloud marred the late-afternoon sky, he shook off the jarring sensation.
Faster! Scant seconds remained. Clan Brodie had been exposed. Their castle’s centuries-old secret somehow breached.
Blood from three attackers speckled his arms and chest. Yet the last one’s dying words bore evidence of the exposure: Your magick castle is ours!
A tang from the skirmish coated his tongue, pungent earth and the coppery taste of blood. Anger churned in his gut. Ferocity pumped through his veins. Single-minded determination overcame burning muscles as he sought to vanquish whatever enemy they faced.
Intent on cutting time, he broke into a sunny glade, ran across rippling purple blooms of heather, then rejoined the well-worn trail. Yet as he rounded the gnarled trunk of an ancient yew, a sudden awareness made him veer wide in the turn.
Alongside the path, lacy fronds of bracken trembled. Then a blur of motion burst forth.
Dark garb registered in his peripheral vision. As did the gleam of a swinging sword.
He unsheathed his own sword, then blocked a strike meant to cleave his neck.
Never pausing his momentum, Gawain twisted his body and shifted forward, swinging his weapon over. Then he tightened his blade down at the last moment for the killing blow.
To his surprise, the swords clashed. Punishing vibration jarred his bones from hand to arm, shoulder to neck, till they rattled a final quiver down through his teeth.
The attacker—a male with flaxen hair, of similar height and breadth to the threesome he’d more easily dispatched—merely sounded a low grunt.
With greater determination, Gawain thrust.
In equal measure, his opponent parried.
Fury darkened his attacker’s eyes.
Exhilaration fired through Gawain’s veins.
Their deadly battle-dance continued with strikes and blocks, thrusts and parries. Each next metallic crash rang out with echoing menace.
“At long last, a worthy opponent,” Gawain murmured.
Gawain arced his sword back around, but once the tip swung skyward, he twisted, tucked, then thrust from a lower angle.
The soldier deflected then stepped aside, just as well trained, equally gifted.
“Aye. An ‘opponent’ who’ll impale yer bloody arse like a stuck pig,” the soldier replied in an English accent. A sick hunger gleamed in his eye.
Amused, Gawain relaxed his stance and drew back his weapon. He tilted his head and narrowed his eyes. “Why eat pig when you can dine like a king?”
The man’s expression fell. As did the tip of his sword while he gave a heavy blink and furrowed his brow. “What’re you on about?”
In the next heartbeat, Gawain lunged with incredible speed. The tip of his sword led the way, piercing the man’s heart before he was able to draw a full gasp of surprise—or reengage his sword.
“The differences between us,” Gawain whispered into the ear of the dying man.
Severe lack of emotion and abundance of wit.
What Gawain possessed and most did not.
With a quick jerk, Gawain freed his sword. As the body crumpled to the ground, he swiped both sides of his weapon on the cleanest patch of the soldier’s woolen tunic. He believed in letting fallen men keep their blood. Off my sword.
English! The revelation of how far and wide their exposure had traveled still stunned him.
No time! He charged back toward the footpath and raced on.
After another few hundred yards, the clear sounds of combat filtered into the dense forest: the clatter of weapons, shouts and grunts from men.
Seconds later, he burst upon a greater battle. Or what little remained of it.
His brethren carved and sliced through their own tenacious dark-garbed attackers. One Brodie to five English. But the last of their foe fell in rapid succession, one after the other, none prepared for the skill of the unique clan of Highlanders.
With no immediate threat left to eliminate, Gawain sheathed his weapon.
A second strange thunder boomed through his chest.
And its fading vibration carried the aftertaste of something imminent…weighty. As if an event of great import was about to transpire. Involving me? Or the clan.
Dismayed by the inexplicable and unnerving sensation, Gawain stared toward the western horizon as a fiery sun dipped below jagged mountain peaks.
Two warhorses suddenly appeared below his line of vision, one snow white, the other coal black. Both materialized seemingly from nowhere. And knowing their riders as Gawain did, they likely had.
Another powerful vibration reverberated through Gawain’s chest so hard, he stifled the urge to cough as his family approached.
Astride the white mare was Isobel Brodie with her long blond hair flying back in the wind. Clad in her custom deerskin hunting outfit, she braced her toddler son between her arms.
On the black stallion rode Iain, Isobel’s husband, Gawain’s older brother, and Laird of Clan Brodie. He cradled their lad’s twin sister with a father’s protective hand.
Clutched in Iain’s other hand was a magickal box whose surface sparkled even in gloaming’s waning light.
Yet that box had never left Brodie Castle.
Not in all the years of Gawain’s life.
Nor in any of the legendary tales of generations past.
An unmistakable sense of foreboding washed over him as his fellow warriors gathered to watch their leader and kin draw near.
“All approach the battlefront?” their commander, Robert, inquired to his right.
“With the wee ones?” Duncan asked at his left.
The warriors were part of Iain’s elite guardsmen. Twelve in total. Closer than brothers.
“Nay.” Naught was as it seemed. A great change had begun. Those facts rang true with every heavy beat of his heart. And he’d somehow landed in the center of its shifting tides. “They’ll be but a moment,” he murmured.
Even if Gawain failed to comprehend how he knew what was about to transpire, he sensed why they’d come.
Fate had descended upon him. Though the circumstance made little sense.
“I’ll not take your place!” Gawain objected to the notion. The magickal box may as well have been scepter, orb, and crown. For of the many powers it wielded, foremost among them had long been to ordain the next Brodie male as chieftain of their clan.
“Aye, you will.” Iain lifted the hallowed box high, reaching back.
“You remain hale and whole.” Fit to rule. No reason to shift the obligation.
“We’ve no time to explain.” Isobel tightened her legs to bring her mount alongside Iain’s as she glanced at her husband. “Danger abounds. And we’ve been summoned”—at the last word, she directed Gawain a pointed look, heavy with meaning—“away.”
Gawain sighed. Away through time itself. No explanation needed.
A strange feeling quivered in his gut. Akin to uncertainty. And a more familiar one: dread. Of the unknown. Of the burden of a reign he had never expected to shoulder.
The obsessive focus of battle had served him well all his life, had helped him overcome childhood demons. Even to the detriment of relations with close family. Namely his sister, Brigid, who he’d wrongly blamed for the cause of those demons so long ago. But Gawain had already come to accept how he’d done Brigid a grave disservice and labored to make amends.
Of late, he’d grown more noble. Worthy of the reign.
And his brother well knew it.
“’Tis the way of it,” Iain bellowed for all the guardsmen to hear in witness of the historic moment. “You’ll lead the clan through.”
“Aye.” Gawain gave a clipped nod to his brother in dutiful acceptance of the role.
Iain dipped his chin with satisfaction, punched his arm forward, and released his grip.
The box arced through the air.
With narrowed eyes, Gawain thrust his hands up to catch it.
Yet at the exact moment his fingertips made contact with its cool metal sides, several monumental events happened at once, in plain sight of their guardsmen.
A bright bolt of lightning shot from ground to sky with a true boom of thunder.
Isobel touched a hand to Iain’s shoulder and Clan Brodie’s former ruling family vanished, warhorses and all.
Heat sparked from the box to his fingers and flashed through his entire body.
And a raven-haired woman appeared out of thin air. Vibrant blue eyes stared straight at him. Her slender hand rested atop the box.
“Nay!” Gawain growled, furious.
In his disgruntled shock of becoming laird, he’d forgotten the other burden the ancient box bestowed.
A soul mate.
Enjoy the rest of the adventure…
Found in Flame and Moonlight