Chapter 28 Robyn
ROBYN
It seemed like a nightmare, finding myself at the hospital for the second time since arriving in Scotland. Lucy’s private bodyguards stood like towering human shields in front of her hospital room, and there was a buzz about the place that not even Adair incited.
Hollywood actor Lucy Wainwright was almost killed by a masked assailant.
The same man who murdered one of Lachlan’s security guards.
I didn’t know McHugh, but his death weighed heavily on my shoulders.
The bodyguards parted from Lucy’s doorway and Lachlan slipped out, his features taut. While others might look at him and see stoic, I saw distress.
I wanted to go to him.
Mac’s presence almost stopped me, but I thought, fuck it.
I met Lachlan halfway and embraced him before he could say a word.
It soon became apparent that his tense body wasn’t relaxing and his hands hovered lightly over my back, not fully embracing me in return.
Now feeling a little weird about hugging him, I stepped away.
He didn’t even seem to register he’d been in my arms. Barely meeting my eyes, Lachlan focused on Mac.
“Lucy will be okay. She’s recovering from mild hypothermia.
They reckon she was only in there for about five minutes. Lucy can’t remember anything.”
Jesus. The commercial freezer operated at 0°F. “Mild hypothermia?”
He nodded but still didn’t look at me. “They’re keeping her overnight for observation, but the doctor said she’ll be okay to return to the castle tomorrow.”
Mac grimaced. “Lachlan, the members have been alerted, what with the police … and McHugh.” Anger burned in Mac’s gaze at the mention of his man, and I reached out to squeeze his hand. “They’ve begun preparations to leave.”
Lachlan took this news with no reaction. “I need to get back to Lucy. You get back to the castle.”
“Can I see her?” I asked. “Eredine is out in the waiting room as well.”
He shook his head. “You’ll see her when she gets back to the estate. Take Eredine with you and relocate her to the castle. On our floor. I want her under guard too. Mac, have you checked on my family?”
Mac nodded. “Of course. Arrochar has been moved temporarily to Thane’s. I have security watching the premises.”
“Thank you. I have to get back.” He turned and marched into Lucy’s room without another word.
Unease settled over me, but when I looked at my dad, I shrugged it off. There was no time to stew over Lachlan’s distant behavior. We had an estate to secure—and a killer to find.
After kissing Lucy’s warm cheek, I leaned away from her and returned her soft smile. Hers was sleepy but at least it was there. “I’m glad you’re okay.”
“Me too, gorgeous,” she murmured and closed her eyes.
I drifted away from her bed, my attention moving to Lachlan who stood at the footboard watching his friend, steadfastly not looking at me.
That niggle in my gut returned.
I was surprised Lucy hadn’t upped and fled Ardnoch, but Lachlan said she insisted on staying, that no one was chasing her away while he needed her.
Did he need her?
Studying him watching over her like a grim guardian angel, I thought perhaps he did.
“I can stay,” I offered. “Let you sleep.”
He shook his head. “No. I’m good here.”
There was an unpleasant twinge in my chest. “I could keep you company, if you need to talk.”
Now he looked at me. “I don’t. You should go. There are things to be done. Aren’t there?”
He was so cold.
So far away.
I experienced another pained sensation. “Right. Well, I’m around if you …” I trailed off and stalked out of the bedroom. Squeezing past Lucy’s bodyguards, I strolled down the hall with my head held high.
If Lachlan didn’t need me, that was fine.
Mac did. He was determined to find the bastard who killed McHugh. So was I. We had to figure this out together.
Not even a walk along the beach with Mac could soothe me. The gentle lap of the water should have been calming, but all I kept thinking about was Lucy and McHugh.
“There has to be something we’re missing from that footage,” I said for the hundredth time.
Mac sighed at my side. “We’ve checked it over and over. So have the police.”
While the security team was distracted by the cameras down at the gate, our masked assailant broke into the castle.
We’d caught him on several cameras. From what we could piece together, he’d broken into Lucy’s room.
She had no recollection of the encounter, but we had him on camera, brazenly carrying her unconscious body over his shoulder through the castle down to the kitchens.
McHugh was on his way to check the camera situation down at the gate when he heard something and followed the noise.
From what we could ascertain from the footage, the assailant heard McHugh before he saw him, hid Lucy out of sight, and waited behind the kitchen door.
Studying it was chilling. I wanted to scream at the cameras, to warn McHugh to watch out.
But, of course, it was too late. McHugh walked into the kitchen, our killer stepped into sight much like he’d done to Mac outside his cottage, and stabbed the security guard several times in the gut before the man had time to react.
As a cop, I’d seen lots of horrible things.
Even had them done to me. It didn’t make watching that play out any less devastating.
Unlike Mac, whose major organs were miraculously missed, the masked man used a long kitchen knife and stabbed McHugh six times, perforating his major organs.
He had a wife, a baby boy. Now they no longer had a husband and a father because I hadn’t stopped this bastard already.
“Stop blaming yourself, Robyn.”
“I can’t help it. We’re not exactly dealing with a mastermind here, and yet he’s left behind barely any clues. McHugh is dead. Lucy had hypothermia—”
“But is alive and well.”
“And Lachlan’s business is in jeopardy.” Just as Mac had relayed to Lachlan that first morning after the murder, once the members found out, they started fleeing the estate.
Adair called in extra security for both the club and his family.
And not just because of the killer but because of the press.
Someone leaked the story of Greg McHugh’s murder, and it was all over the papers two days after the attack.
While paparazzi couldn’t get onto the estate, they flooded into the village. They received ice-cold treatment from Ardnoch residents, many of whom “reserved the right not to serve them,” but it didn’t deter the paparazzi. Having them around was making us all uptight and anxious.
Plus, I couldn’t forget the new evidence that landed in our laps, making everything all the more confusing.
When Lachlan called Brodan’s head of security to inform them that the people he cared about were in jeopardy, he discovered Brodan’s team was dealing with threatening messages too.
That put a whole new spin on it. They sent us their received messages, which were less lovelorn but more vengeful with threats of ruin and misery.
While they had a different tone to Lachlan’s—and might just be a coincidence—we couldn’t discount the possible connection.
“Maybe we’re dealing with two people with vendettas against the Adairs, and they’ve joined forces. It would explain a lot.”
“It is possible,” Mac conceded. “But I wish it wasn’t. It’s bad enough trying to figure out who our masked killer is.”
Killer.
How did we get here? We’d progressed from a high-level threat to red blinking lights and screaming sirens. My escape that night in the trailer took on an even more chilling edge than before.
“Do you still think it’s McCulloch?” Mac asked.
The thought of the farmer taking it this far didn’t sit right in my gut, but he was still the one with the clearest motive.
“Grief is a strange thing, Dad. Who knows? It could be he started this and his only intention was to ruin Lachlan’s business—mission possibly accomplished—and whoever he joined forces with has crossed the line. ”
“You don’t think he’s a murderer?”
“Do you?” I frowned. “I mean … I do get very angry vibes from him, but I don’t know. And I can’t cross him off the list for an ‘I don’t know.’”
“If it makes you feel better, my gut tells me McCulloch isn’t a murderer. But you’re right. He could be working with someone who has gotten out of line.”
“And the background check on his grandson came back with no red flags?”
“Right. Hardly anything on it. No criminal charges, no debt. Nothing of interest.”
“Damn it,” I whispered, frustrated beyond belief.
“How is Lachlan coping?” Mac asked. “I mean, actually coping?” At my questioning look, my dad shrugged. “He’s not saying much, so I assumed he’d tell you more than he’s telling me.”
Wrong.
I stared stonily at the water. “I know as much as you.”
Hearing my flat tone, Mac cleared his throat. “Do you … want to talk about it?”
And say what? Admit that I was hurt? That I was a fool woman like all the other fool women who came before me? “Not really.”
“What about that phone call from Seth?”
I tensed. We’d been in the security room going over footage when Seth called five days ago.
I’d cut him off twice and he kept calling, so I’d answered in front of Mac.
My stepfather was worried about Regan again.
She wasn’t answering his calls, and he was considering filing a report.
It wasn’t the first time my little sister had done this.
In fact, when she took off after my shooting, we filed a report, and then she finally got off her ass and called to tell us she was in Bali.
Concerned, but pretty sure she was doing her usual irresponsible silent bailing-out on life, I’d explained to Seth the situation at Ardnoch but said I’d come home if he was certain she was in trouble.
He said he wasn’t.
That his gut told him she’d just taken off again.
Seth was just being a dad. I got it. I understood. My stepdad told me he’d take care of it and keep me posted. Then he asked me to be careful and told me he loved me.