His uncle swore. “I didn’t think of that. Raul prefers his motorcycle these days.”
“All the more reason to take a horse if he wanted to get away unseen.”
“Hold a minute.” The phone went quiet, and Gabriel waited, knowing his uncle was asking someone to check the royal stables. Of course, Raul might have gotten a friend to pick him up somewhere.
But what the hell could be so important that his cousin had needed no one to know about it?
Gabriel had an ominous sense that it had something to do with the kidnapping. Everything seemed to be about that one event right now.
“One of the quarter horses is missing,” his uncle said.
So Raul had needed a steady, sure-footed ride. “Is the general sending out search parties?” General Ramos was responsible for military security around the palace and lily fields.
“Not yet. I don’t want this to blow up into a dramatic news story if Raul just needed—what is it young people say?—some space.”
Gabriel doubted that Raul would throw his father into a frenzy of worry for some space. “I’m going to take a guess at where he might be, based on the horse he chose. I’ll get Hugo to meet me with a horse at the foot of the Pico de Luto trail. No fanfare, so the press won’t be interested.”
“You think he went into the mountains for his space?” His uncle’s voice carried a shade of relief.
“It’s possible. I’ll keep you updated.”
“Vaya con Dios.” His uncle disconnected.
Gabriel got hold of the head groom and arranged for his favorite quarter horse to be trailered to the foot of Pico de Luto. He also organized a car to pick up Quinn and return her to her office.
When he walked back inside the restaurant, his gaze fell on Quinn’s profile as she stared out at the ocean, her brown hair glowing almost red in the coastal sunshine. Disappointment swept through him. He had to leave her here with the secrets of her past still uncovered.
She turned at his approach, her glasses flashing in the light. “Bad news?” she asked, one dark eyebrow raised.
“I need to work on my poker face,” he said ruefully. “I have to leave you. A car is coming in about thirty minutes to drive you wherever you want to go. Take your time, though. Enjoy the rest of the meal. I assure you it will be delicious.”
“I have to ask,” she said in a low voice as she stood. “Does the news have anything to do with the investigation?”
He shook his head. “A family matter that requires my presence.”
Her gaze skimmed over his face in a way that made him feel she was gauging whether he told the truth or not. She gave him a wry smile. “Are you sure you aren’t just having second thoughts about me driving your Spano?”
“There’s an American term…a rain check, I think? I will issue you one on the Spano.” He smiled back at her. This time, her deflection had been for his benefit. “And another rain check on finishing our meal?”
She nodded and then shifted on her feet, looking awkward.
He smiled as he understood. He held out his hand toward her in an imitation of her American style of greeting. She took it, her palm small and warm against his. Then she grinned and dropped a perfect little curtsy. “Thank you for lunch, Don Gabriel.”
He upped the game, lifting her hand to his lips and brushing them across her knuckles. “The pleasure was mine,” he said, feeling a surge of heat as her grin vanished in a barely audible gasp. She felt the chemistry between them too.
She didn’t quite pull her hand out of his grasp, but she did hide it behind her back when he released her.
Mierda! Now he wanted to see how high he could fan those flames.
“I’ll be in touch,” he said before turning to walk away.
Gabriel let his horse pick his way up the steep, rocky trail, relying on the animal’s better instincts and sure-footedness, even though he wanted to hurry the beast up. The creak of the saddle leather and the clang of horseshoes striking stones usually soothed him. Today, though, he strained to catch some sound or signal from his missing cousin.
Suddenly, the horse stopped and let out a loud whinny, his belly contracting with the effort. Gabriel held his breath for a long moment before an answering whinny came from above and to the right. He urged his mount forward faster.
Fifty feet farther up, a path he recognized branched off from the trail, and Gabriel turned his horse onto it, plunging through a grove of cedars that filled his lungs with their smoky, woodsy scent. The track led to a rocky ledge perched on the side of the mountain, dotted with patches of mountain grass. He and Raul had often stopped there in their younger days when they had packed sandwiches and bottles of water in their saddlebags. From their vantage point, they could survey a scenic swath of Raul’s kingdom all the way to the sea.
“I’m here,” Raul called out, his voice leaden with resignation.