“Good. Glad to hear it.” Brodan gestured around. “What brings you here?”
I forced myself not to look at Aria. “Aria and I are friends. She wanted to pay her respects, and I thought I’d keep her company.”
He and Walker exchanged a knowing look I pretended not to see.
“Collum seems like he was quite the character.”
Brodan frowned. “He was always a crabbit auld bastard to me, but I have to forgive him because he saved my brother’s and Robyn’s lives.”
“Aye, what happened there?” I asked.
But before Brodan could tell me, a hush fell over the room. I turned to see what had drawn everyone’s attention.
Standing in the doorway was the man I’d seen usher Sarah McCulloch from the castle that fateful morning two weeks ago. Sympathy scored through me as Jared McCulloch looked around the room, dark circles of grief under his eyes.
People seemed to wait with bated breath as his gaze landed on Lachlan.
Then he determinedly crossed the room. Lachlan drew himself up as if preparing for a confrontation. But Jared merely held out his hand to shake. “I’m going to do what my grandad wanted to do but was too stubborn to admit he wanted … bury that damn stupid feud.”
Lachlan pressed his lips together, his eyes looking suspiciously bright. He clasped Jared’s hand in both of his. “Despite everything, I admired the hell out of Collum. And I’ll never forget what he did for me and my wife. His loss is felt deeply.”
Jared swallowed hard and nodded his thanks.
Clapping a hand on his back, Lachlan embraced the younger man and turned him toward the bar. “Let me buy you a drink.”
“Sometimes my big brother is a pain in the arse,” Brodan murmured at my side. “But then he goes and does shit like that, inspiring the rest of us to be better men, which only makes him an even bigger pain in the arse.”
I chuckled softly as the volume again increased. The Gloaming had been built in the square with a large car park for visitors out front. The historical architecture and design of the village appealed to tourists as much as we celebrities staying on the village outskirts. Everything predated the mid-twentieth century, and dominating it all, near the Gloaming, sat a medieval cathedral.
Shops, restaurants, and bed-and-breakfasts scattered throughout the village on quaint row streets. Castle Street was the main road off the square that led out of Ardnoch toward Ardnoch Castle and Estate. It was an avenue of identical nineteenth-century terraced houses with dormer windows. Many of the homes had been converted into boutiques, cafés, and inns. I’d only ventured into the village a few times, but I’d been struck by how picturesque it was.
The Gloaming itself was like most old pubs in Scotland. It had low ceilings with dark wooden beams, a large fireplace, and traditional furniture with a modern twist.
Aria stood with Monroe near a large table occupied by the Adair family. And they were an outrageously braw-looking bunch. I spotted Eredine, the Pilates, yoga, and mindfulness instructor from Ardnoch. I’d taken a few of her classes over the last year. According to Aria, she was engaged to the youngest Adair brother and pub co-owner, Arran. He sat at her side, his arm wrapped around her shoulders as they chatted with the couple opposite them—an attractive redhead and a bearded man who shared too much of a resemblance to the Adair men not to be one of them. Since I knew Arran, Lachlan, and Brodan, the man had to be Thane Adair, and the woman at his side was presumably his wife Regan.
Beside them were three kids. One I knew was Sloane’s daughter Callie, and the other two were dark-haired, a boy and a girl. I didn’t know who they were, but they clearly belonged to the Adairs. And tucked into the corner was a man I knew because he’d followed Lachlan Adair everywhere as his bodyguard back in the day—Mackennon Galbraith. He held a baby in his arms while the striking woman at his side, whom I knew was Arrochar Adair, sat chatting with Lachlan’s wife, Robyn, who also cradled a young child.
Monroe held her and Brodan’s son. The Hollywood star who gave up acting for the childhood sweetheart he’d reunited with had fascinated the world, and I remembered the paps had hounded them for a while. But Brodan hadn’t given up Hollywood entirely. He’d turned his hand to screenwriting, producing, and directing. He’d found a way to have everything he wanted by returning to his roots. To the Adairs.
They were a big, growing family. Close as could be.
I felt a pang of envy watching them.
My eyes moved to Aria. “Excuse me,” I muttered and crossed the room to place a hand on Aria’s back.
She glanced up with a surprised smile of welcome. “Hey. You okay?”
I nodded. “You?”
“It’s sad, but it’s also really amazing to see how someone’s life can affect others. All these people came out to say goodbye to Mr. McCulloch. There are famous people who can’t inspire that level of emotion.”
Her words hit a wee bit too close to home. Who would truly miss me if something happened to me?
At my flinch, her eyes widened. “North—”
A bell rang out around the bar, cutting her off, and we all turned. Arran Adair now stood behind the bar, drawing everyone’s attention. “I just want to thank you all”—his voice boomed around the room—“for coming here today to celebrate Collum and the indelible mark he’s left on Ardnoch. I’m sure he’d be mortified by the attention, which just makes me glad we did this all the more.”
Everyone chuckled and raised their glasses with a “Hear! Hear!” A glance at Jared showed him smirking too.
“Aye, Collum was a gruff man. But he was as stable and loyal and as certain of who he was as any man I’ve ever known. He was Ardnoch. So, while this is a sad occasion, I know Collum wouldn’t want us to be sad. Because he was a farmer. He was connected to nature, to the circle, to the passing of seasons more than any of us. He’d say that this, his loss, was just life, after all. So raise a glass to Collum. Raise your glass”—Arran lifted his—“to life. And to the circle of it.” His gaze moved across the room and landed on Thane and Regan.
“To life!” everyone cheered.
Aria stiffened at my side, and I learned why when she leaned into Sloane and asked, “Regan’s pregnant?”
Sloane and Monroe exchanged a look, and Monroe smiled. “We just found out yesterday.”
Aria’s face lit up at the news, and she excused herself before drifting off to offer congratulations.
I was distracted from my intense awareness of the woman when Eredine came over to say hello. Eredine had a serene quality that matched well with her occupation. Originally from the States, she’d picked up a slight Scottish inflection in her accent. She asked how I was doing after the scandal, and because of the sincerity she exuded, I didn’t mind talking about it with her. Her fiancé, Arran, quickly joined us, however, who turned the conversation to their wedding, happening in a matter of weeks. His pointed need to remind me that his fiancée was taken amused me. Either he was so infatuated with Eredine he couldn’t see past it, or I was doing well at hiding my obsession with Aria.
Soon enough I’d understand exactly where Arran was coming from when, a half hour later, I turned from chatting with Walker and Sloane to see Aria at the bar. With Jared McCulloch.