Danny
âWe are staying in that hotel, Danny?â
We are parked outside the gate of my mansion. A stillness washes over me as it always does when I set eyes on my gothic beauty after time away. The panoramic and uninterrupted elevated sea views were the reason I sunk a lot of money into this place.
I made an offer twenty minutes after walking into it and outbid the other bidder by an obnoxious amount to seal the deal.
Watching the stormy sea with the waves crashing against the rocks as music while the wood burner roars in the background? Priceless.
âItâs not a hotel,â I explain as I wind down the car window. A gust of icy air hits us and she screeches in retaliation. âItâs a home away from London.â
âThis is all yours?â Her breath comes out in small puffs of cold air. I canât wait to get her inside into the heat.
Fuck, whatâs the code? I always forget this.
I reach my arm through the window and press a code into the keypad.
Nope.
Try again.
The black wrought iron double gates automatically open. I coax the car up the windy hill in second gear until we creep to a stop outside Sumburgh Hall.
âAre we the only ones staying here?â She turns to me with her smouldering green eyes, and my heartbeat does that erratic little beat it does every time she gives me her full attention. Does she not notice the effect she has on me?
âDanny?â Charlie repeats.
âBesides the ghost and the gargoyles.â I grin as we get out of the car. The two leering gargoyles on either side of the door stare down at us.
âBuilt in 1867,â she reads the placard on the wall. âThe place will be crawling with ghosts.â
I fumble with the keys. The wooden door is so large it makes even me look puny. A few hard shoves, and we are in.
âWow.â She does a 360-degree turn in the hallway. âThis place is magnificent.â Her voice echoes through the hallway. âBut so haunted, Danny. You cannot leave my sight even when I go to the toilet. Also, just to set expectations, we wonât be having sex again because Iâm not removing any clothes until we are back in England. Itâs too cold.â
âCome on.â I put my hand on her lower back and lead her down the hall, our footsteps clicking on the stone floors. âThatâs why I have a massive fireplace. I told you it was cold,â I berate her like a scolding father as I take her into the sitting room.
She hesitates at the threshold, mouth dropping open. âDanny, this place is like a fairy-tale.â
I gaze around the vast rustic area with its cathedral ceiling, seeing it through her eyes. It really is spectacular.
âAre these walls stone?â she asks, trailing her hands along them.
âYup. All the original features are preserved.â
She looks at me intently, those green eyes burning into mine. âItâs beautiful. This mansion ⦠this life. It doesnât even faze you anymore, does it?â
âTheyâre just possessions, Charlie,â I reply simply. âThings to be appreciated, treasured ⦠but disposable. Iâve had real loss in my life. These things? Donât even register on the scale.â
I turn on the open gas fire, standing nearly as tall as me, and it roars to life.
It was the only thing I compromised on by tweaking from the original feature; fumbling about with coal and sticks every night wasnât my idea of a relaxing holiday.
She plants herself cross-legged right beside it.
I hunker down on my knees to unzip my travel bag and rummage through it. âHere, take this.â
Her eyes are wide as she inspects the thermal jacket I hand her. âThis is for me?â
âWell, I doubt Iâll squeeze into it.â
âYou bought this for me? Itâs even in my size!â
âDonât forget these.â I wrap the thermal scarf around her neck and fasten the hat on her head. âYou look cute.â I grin.
âIâm so warm!â she shrieks, wrapping her arms around my neck. âHow did you have time to get this? How are you so thoughtful? Itâs making me horny.â
âGood.â I lift a brow. âBecause as soon as you are warm, Iâm going to strip you naked.â
***
We finish dinner beside the fire.
Scotch in hand, I watch her sleeping face and the movement of her chest as it rises up and down on my lap.
The red wine topped with the cold air has her out like a light. I brush a finger down her sharp cheekbone, careful not to wake her.
Her eyelids flutter indicating she is dreaming.
Watching her will never get boring. Her breath falls out softly from her full lips. If I have to sit like this all night, I will, just so she can sleep here, peaceful and protected by me.
I need to bite the bullet and tell Tristan. Iâll make him understand that itâs serious, that itâs not like the other flings. I know now itâs not.
Losing Tristan would be something I couldnât recover from. I donât have many friends, not ones I can trust. I can count them on one handâTristan, Jack, Martina and, of course, Karl.
But giving up Charlie now? Itâs not an option. I realise that now, as she sleeps in my lap, her long brown hair draped over my knees. Even the thought of losing her sears me with pain.
Her eyes flit open, and she smiles lazily up at me. âHey, you. Are you being creepy and watching me sleep?â
âGuilty,â I whisper as I run a finger over her bottom lip.
âIâm sorry for calling your plane chitty chitty bang bang.â
I let out a chuckle. âThatâs good because you know thatâs how weâre getting home?â
Her eyes grow wide. âShit. I forgot about that. Am I the craziest bitch youâve ever had in the air?â
âMaybe,â I say softly. âI took Jen to the South of France. That was quite a turbulent flight.â
Her face sags, and I try to recover my faux pas. âNo one has been here with me.â
She gazes up at me, letting out a small laugh. âYou are trying to kill me, so you donât need to tell Tristan. Haunted house on a hillside with gargoyles overlooking sea cliffs. Small plane in thunderstorms. This weekend is a horror cliché.â
I raise a brow. âYouâre the first person to call a million-pound plane small. Truth be told, I donât share this place often. I come here alone or occasionally with Karl. Iâm pretty private, Charlie.â
She lifts herself off my knees so that sheâs facing me, a beautiful crush creeping across her cheeks. âYouâve never taken another woman here?â
âNo.â I frown. âOnly you.â
She inhales softly and cups my cheek in her hand. âThank you for sharing it with me. Does that mean,â she asks quietly, âthat Iâm your girlfriend?â
My eyes hold hers as a barrage of emotions flood me. Fuck this. For the first time in years, I know what I want.
If I could stay in this moment forever, I would.
With this girl.
My girl.
Leave London, my company, everything behind and become hermits on these cliffs.
âYes, Charlie. You most certainly are.â
She rests her head on my shoulders, and I inhale deeply into her hair.
So this is what content feels like.
Charlie
Itâs a contender for my favourite day on the planet so far.
I woke up to a morning coffee overlooking the sea then we spent the morning hiking across miles of breathtaking coastline. Despite the brutal winds punching me repeatedly in the face, Iâm starting to understand why Danny loves it so much here.
Weâve walked for miles without seeing another person; in fact, it feels like our own private island. Just us, the sheep, and puffins.
The âDanny up a mountain trying not to step in sheep pelletsâ versus âCEO Danny negotiating acquisitionsâ? Like chalk and cheese. Here his smile reaches his eyes, and the deep-set frown has all but vanished.
âI told you my grandmother lives here.â He squeezes my hand as we meander down the cobbled streets of the main town, window shopping the thrift shops. âWeâre going to her house for lunch.â
âWhat?â I stop short, filled with sudden panic.
My hair is wild, and Iâm wearing so many layers of clothing I look like Iâve been bubble-wrapped.
âI canât meet your granny!â My arms flap wildly to highlight my wild sheep farmer look. âLike this!â
âYou look beautiful,â he says as he pulls me down another pedestrianised side street. Thatâs the lovely thing about the Shetland islands, thereâs hardly any traffic.
âSheâs from Shetland, Charlie. Do you think sheâs expecting you to rock up in a designer frock?â
âA bit of warning would have been nice,â I grumble. âSo I could have at least brushed my hair.â
He stops outside a small cottage at the corner of the street.
âNervous?â he grins, kissing my forehead.
âTerrified,â I hiss as I try to flatten down my hair. âWhat if she hates me?â
He raises a brow. âWhy the hell would she hate you? Sheâll love you as much as I do.â
My eyes search his.
âAs much as you do?â I whisper, watching him.
He smiles softly but evades the question. âCome on. Get ready for the interrogation.â
He knocks on the door, setting my pulse racing. This is more than I had signed up for today. On the flight, I pretty much downed a bottle of red wine to calm my nerves, so Iâm not on my A-game with conversation today.
âDanny!â The door opens, and a bohemian-looking lady, probably in her 80âs at a guess, reaches up to hug her handsome grandson.
Her body is draped in colourfully patterned clothes, mismatched with vibrant chunky jewellery dangling from her neck and arms. Sheâs got a hint of the Walker dark features showing through the grey.
I look down at my own attire, more akin to living rough in the woods, and silently curse Danny.
His large biceps curl around her frail ones. I wonder if this is his grandmother on his motherâs or fatherâs side. Surely his motherâs side?
âHello, my dear, so lovely to meet you.â Her accent is strong. I have to focus on every word to keep up.
âCharlie, this is my grandmother, Edme.â
She smiles at me warmly as she reaches for a hug, giving me a strong whiff of sherry.
âSo lovely to meet you, Edme,â I say. âYour cottage is truly beautiful.â
She bundles us into the cottage, as quaint on the inside as it is on the outside, a world away from Dannyâs luxurious gaffs. I expect sheâs never wanted to move even though he has offered.
âSit down, sit down!â she fusses. âIâve just made tea and lunch for us. I hope you are hungry!â
My stomach growls in response.
We hiked for hours without a cafe in sight. I realised Iâve been living in London too long when I asked where I would get a flat white coffee with almond milk, only to be given a look of disapproval by Danny.
âLook, you donât need to eat it if you donât want to,â Danny murmurs as she goes to the kitchen.
âWhy wouldnât I eat it?â I frown.
âYouâll see.â He smiles.
âDo you need any help?â I call into the kitchen.
âNo, dear.â She comes through the door carrying a tray with three bowls on it.
âDanny said you liked fish,â she declares, setting down the tray on the table.
I peer in horror at the massacred hollowed out fish heads staring up at me with their glassy eyes.
âItâs called crappit heid,â he explains to me, holding back a smirk.
âSome would call it fish haggis,â Edme explains proudly to me. âWe ram the fish with oats, suet, and onions. Then we sew the head shut again and boil it in our seawater. Itâs very healthy.â
I pick up the bowl of steaming fish heads and plaster on my lying happy face. âSounds yummy.â
âHere.â Danny leans in, watching me trying to spear a fish head with my fork. âYou open it from this end.â
He levers my fork in, and the head opens.
I tentatively gather a small sample of food onto my fork and take a bite. Itâs not bad. If I donât think too much about what it is, I can cope.
I nod a sigh of relief at him as he chuckles.
âWould you like some sherry in your tea, dear?â
âSure!â I giggle, thinking Edme was a bit of a good time girl in her day. âIâve heard some of your songs, sweetie. They are beautiful.â She takes my teacup and adds a generous amount of sherry.
My eyes pop wide. How would she have heard my songs? Surely sheâs not on OpenMic?
âDanny shared them with me years ago,â she explains, her eyes twinkling at my surprise. âHe talked about Tristanâs sister who was a singer.â
âItâs just a hobby.â I blush. âIâm not an actual singer.â I turn to Danny in disbelief. âI didnât think you liked them. You seemed so distant at all of my gigs.â
He cocks a brow. âSeriously? Itâs called self-preservation, Charlie. Canât you read me at all?â
âI knew back then that he carried a torch for you.â Mischief dances in her eyes as she looks between us both. âI knew I would meet you one day.â
âCareful, Grandma,â Danny scolds gently. âDonât scare her away.â
âIâm not scared,â I reply, deadpan. And for the first time in my procession of flings and relationships, I mean it.
I stare at him, and he holds my gaze, a recognition passing between us.
If Danny Walker wants me to move to the Shetlands, live on a sheep farm, and make him fish haggis every day, then sign me up.