The Heart of MacLeod’s Cove (MacLeod’s Cove #2)

The Heart of MacLeod’s Cove (MacLeod’s Cove #2)

By Diana Fraser

Chapter 1

Chapter One

Oliver Perry-Warnes stirred sugar into his coffee, hoping it might improve it, and glanced across the road at the reason he was drinking inferior coffee in a down-at-heel hotel in a village far from his usual city haunts.

Tall, slender, platinum-blonde hair cut into a choppy bob, she was nothing like he’d imagined.

From the tone of her emails, he’d conjured up a battle-axe of a woman. Loud, ferocious and unrelenting. Someone with uncompromisingly short hair, hacked into shape around a face that could kill at ten paces.

He checked her again. Make that three.

Apart from the battle-axe face, he’d got the details right.

But he’d been wildly wrong about how they came together.

Because the owner of the Perching Parrot Café, Miss Lucy MacLeod, was exceptionally sexy and had the face of an angel.

And he considered he had sufficient expertise in this area to back up his judgement.

It also appeared she ran a very popular café — another detail he hadn’t imagined.

But then, he didn’t think anyone could have imagined the mural painted over the facade of the antiquated premises, least of all him.

He’d always prided himself on his excellent taste.

He grimaced at the crude painting of enormous, brightly coloured parrots.

It looked like something a school kid had done — a school kid who wasn’t very good at art.

Why on earth would someone with clear business sense run a successful café from such premises? Because the packed tables beneath the awning, the queue at the door and the fast-moving waiting staff all told him that this business was doing very well indeed.

Meanwhile, the Old Colonial Hotel served coffee that ought to be illegal.

Lucy MacLeod remained a puzzle — but one he was determined to solve.

Not least because he’d invested too much in the purchase of the decrepit hotel in which he now sat.

And it wasn’t only money. His reputation — and the future of the next project, the one he’d been working towards his entire life — depended on it. Oliver Perry-Warnes did not fail.

And yet, with the Old Colonial, he hadn’t even cleared the first hurdle. Public consultation.

The notice he’d arranged to be pinned on the community board had vanished. Local Facebook groups had refused to share the information. Even the local paper had barely mentioned it. Only one person had turned up for the official consultation meeting — the hall’s caretaker.

Which meant he had to deal with the person whose frequent emails and social-media comments suggested she was the ringleader. That that person should have the face of an angel amused him.

He tapped his fingers on the stained Formica as he watched Lucy MacLeod move through her café.

She wove between tables, stopping to chat as she served meals.

The place was bathed in sunshine, the patrons sheltered beneath the garish awning.

The café’s only competition was this hotel and its disgusting coffee, which probably explained everything.

Even commuters paused for takeaways. The staff barely stopped moving. Plates of muffins here, eggs Benedict there. His stomach betrayed him at the smell of bacon even as he automatically calculated her profits. They’d be good.

He’d go over soon enough. But first, he wanted to see what she’d do with the second consultation notice.

He didn’t have to wait long. A few moments later, the dairy owner emerged into the sunshine and beckoned to her. Lucy shaded her eyes and read the noticeboard. Immediately she reached into the bag slung across her body, withdrew a set of keys and unlocked the glass case.

Then — in a performance worthy of a consummate entertainer — she turned to her diners and said something that made them all look up.

Whatever it was, brought smiles and a few cheers from her audience.

The cheers rose to a crescendo as she took his notice, tore it from top to bottom with so much flair that even he felt like cheering, turned the pieces in her hand and then tore them again.

Even the dour couple a few tables away from him smiled and nodded their approval.

Oliver’s jaw clenched. She had them all in the palm of her hand.

He scraped back his chair, pulled out his phone and sent a single message to his assistant.

Initiate Plan C.

By the time he’d finished, Lucy MacLeod had disappeared inside, leaving the dairy owner to pick up the pieces — literally. He recognised her style and, despite everything, respected it.

He pocketed his phone, paid for his untouched coffee and stepped into the sunlight.

While his assistant worked on Plan C, he’d move to Plan B. No one else could help with Plan B because that was all down to him. Charm her. He’d never failed yet.

He’d moved.

The stranger with the dark hair, dark suit and impenetrable sunglasses was paying his bill. From the look on Brenda’s face, he hadn’t impressed her. That alone intrigued Lucy.

She turned back to the teenagers, who were telling her about a band they’d seen in Wellington the night before. She liked listening to them. She wasn’t much older, in years at least. In experience she felt a lifetime away.

She glanced back across the road. He stood in the sunlight now, checking the street before crossing. Interesting.

Her curiosity had been hooked the moment she’d emerged from the kitchen that morning, flour still on her hands after hours of baking, and spotted him at the hotel window opposite — nursing the same cup of coffee he clearly wasn’t enjoying.

Then why not come over here? Why sit in that gloomy old place, which only a few stalwarts and unsuspecting tourists ever visited?

At first, she’d thought he was studying the building and its murals. Perhaps he had a thing for parrots? But he didn’t look the type. Then he’d lifted his sunglasses and his gaze stopped ranging over the building and focused on one thing — her.

It was almost funny how he seemed to think he was incognito — as though someone that striking could blend into the background. Drop-dead gorgeous, with an unsmiling mouth and those dark, assessing eyes that suggested control and intent. Neither of which helped him fade into anonymity.

Salesman? No. He would be some kind of executive — the straight, conventional kind, obviously.

Marketing maybe. No. Finance. His clothes and the confidence he exuded suggested he was someone who was accustomed to being the boss, someone used to getting his own way.

It also suggested someone who had a laser-like focus on whatever he was doing.

And at the moment, he was staring at her. She quite liked that.

And now he was crossing the road.

If he thought she’d scuttle behind the counter and pretend she hadn’t noticed him, he had another think coming.

She handed the plates she was holding to a waitress and stepped forward, folding her arms as she watched him approach. He didn’t look away either. He stepped onto the pavement just outside the shelter of the awning.

‘Good morning,’ she said. ‘Come over for a decent cup of coffee?’

His mouth tilted slightly. ‘Half-decent would already be an improvement.’

‘Brenda’s being awkward. If she liked you, she’d have offered you an espresso. What can I get you?’

He planted his hands on his hips. Even from here, she could tell the sun was getting to him.

‘Do you normally serve your customers before they enter the café?’

‘Do you normally stare at someone for half an hour before deciding to speak to them?’

His lips flattened, and a tiny shiver slid down her spine.

‘I don’t like to rush things,’ he said slowly, lifting his sunglasses. With the sun behind him, she still couldn’t read his eyes.

‘Then why don’t you take a seat here?’ she said lightly. ‘Take your time over some food and a proper coffee. You can continue doing whatever it was you were doing over the road.’

‘Perfect.’

‘Outside?’

‘No, inside.’

‘Sure thing. Follow me.’

She could feel his gaze on her as she walked ahead of him — the prickle at the nape of her neck, the low fizz of awareness in her belly giving it away.

She stopped at the table where her laptop sat and swept it up. ‘Best seat in the house.’

‘No.’ He indicated a recently vacated table still cluttered with dirty crockery. ‘I’ll take that one.’

She paused. People usually did what she suggested.

‘Any reason?’

‘Yes. I can do what I came here to do easier from there.’

‘And what’s that?’

‘Get to know you better.’

Her heart stuttered, and she turned away. She was annoyed he’d won the exchange. But if she’d stood her ground, she could have come off a gibbering wreck. That would have been a first.

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