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Kiss of the Irish
Kiss of the Irish
Kiss of the Irish
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Kiss of the Irish

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If Sarah Mercer had ever been asked to describe herself in one word, it would be sensible. After all, she had a steady job. Made prudent decisions. Was in what she though was a logical relationship. But when her fiance dumps her for an exotic dancer, Sarah decides it's time to change...everything! The first thing on her agenda? To get out of town and take a three month trip to Ireland. She'd always been captivated by the Emerald Isle. And she'd heard that there was nothing like an Irishman with a sexy accent and eyes as devastatingly green as the country's rolling hills to make a girl feel better.

But maybe she shouldn't have hooked up with her new landlord on the first night in town. Cian Murphy wasn't supposed to be her type. His arms and chest were tattooed, and he had piercings everywhere. Still, he made her feel beautiful, sexy…alive for the first time in years. Falling for the Irish hottie was as natural as breathing. But figuring out what she'd do when it came time to leave? Not so easy...

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 15, 2017
ISBN9781633757936
Author

Lauren Hawkeye

Lauren Hawkeye is a writer, yoga newbie, knitting aficionado and animal lover who lives in the shadows of the great Rocky Mountains of Alberta, Canada. She's older than she looks–really–and younger than she feels–most of the time–and she loves to explore the journeys that take women through life in her stories. Hawkeye's stories include erotic historical, steamy paranormal, and hot contemporary.

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Sarah decides she needs to get away after she has a bad breakup and she heads for Ireland where she has rented a flat. Her landlord Cian, turns out to be a tattooed, pierced, bad boy, Sarah has decided she definitely doesn't need a man in her life and is going to have trouble keeping her hands off him. Can Cian change Sarah's mind and show her the better side of life, the life and times he can give her.Fun times in Ireland and very sexy. I liked Cian, he was very Irish (like my hubby) and sex on a stick, Sarah didn't stand a chance.

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Kiss of the Irish - Lauren Hawkeye

Table of Contents

Copyright Page

Dedication

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Also by Lauren Hawkeye…

If you love sexy romance, one-click these steamy Brazen releases…

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Copyright © 2017 by Lauren Hawkeye. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

Entangled Publishing, LLC

644 Shrewsbury Commons Ave., STE 181

Shrewsbury, PA 17361

rights@entangledpublishing.com

Brazen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

Edited by Jenn Mishler

Cover design by Erin Dameron-Hill

Cover art from Shutterstock

ISBN 978-1-63375-793-6

Manufactured in the United States of America

First Edition April 2017

This book is for two people:

Jenn Mishler, aka Most Patient Editor of all time, for cheering me on (and also for not pitching me overboard).

And for Lynds—you know why.

HomeSwap4U.com

Posted by: WickedWanderer

Luxurious one bedroom flat in Ceanmore, listing 1847.

Surrounded by majestic mountains and green fields, this flat is a scenic drive away from Dublin and within walking distance of the local market and other amenities. Ceanmore is a quiet town, but for a taste of local nightlife, you’ve only to make your way down the street to Wild Irish, the locally owned pub.

Update: The owner of this flat is no longer seeking to swap homes, but simply to rent his own, which leaves greater flexibility in the dates you choose to travel.

To: Wicked Wanderer

From: S_Mercer1990

To Whom It May Concern:

I am inquiring as to the availability of the one bedroom flat in Ceanmore, listing 1847. I am searching for something available immediately, and plan to stay for a duration of two months. Please contact me if you find this arrangement suitable.

Sincerely,

S. Mercer

To: S_Mercer1990

From: WickedWanderer

Thanks very much for your interest! My name is Cian and I own the flat you’re inquiring about. Attached are more photos of the flat than are shown in the listing—buggering site only allows for two photos at first. Also, the flat has cable telly, slow but functional wifi, and is pet-friendly.

To: WickedWanderer

From: S_Mercer1990

I won’t be bringing a pet, but thank you. I rarely watch television, and as long as the wifi works, I can make do. Can you please tell me the rent? I think there’s been a typo in your listing.

To: S_Mercer1990

From: WickedWanderer

There’s no typo. If the amount is too much, I’m open to negotiation.

To: WickedWanderer

From: S_Mercer1990

Too much? That amount wouldn’t get me a week in my condo here in Boston! Speaking of, are you sure you don’t want to do the house swap and take a trip here? I need to know, so that I can make plans.

To: S_Mercer1990

From: WickedWanderer

Here is where I’ll stay, though I thank you for the offer. Thank you also for the credit history, references, and Facebook friendship. Most renters don’t go to such lengths, but I must say, it’s nice to have some idea of the person moving into my flat before they arrive. Especially when the person is as easy on the eyes as yourself. Tell your husband he’ll want to have a word with Billy Gallagher across the hall once you arrive. The man might be eighty, but he’s an incorrigible flirt, and he has an eye for blondes like yourself.

To: WickedWanderer

From: S_Mercer1990

Here’s some advice from the opposite sex: a Facebook profile picture is not overly indicative of what a person really looks like. It’s what the person wants the world to see. I’m sorry for your Mr. Gallagher, but though I’m not married, I think he’s about to be very disappointed.

To: S_Mercer1990

From: WickedWanderer

Well, Ms. Mercer, here’s some advice for you in return: every face that a person puts on has some inkling of their true self in it. When I look at your photo, here is what I see: a serious woman likely posing for a professional headshot. This woman is wearing far too much makeup, but it’s not enough to hide the fact that her eyes—gorgeous eyes, by the way—are a little bit sad. Of course, the picture only shows your head. You could very well be one of those stick insect types who survives on kale. This will disappoint Mr. Gallagher greatly.

To: WickedWanderer

From: S_Mercer1990

I am most certainly not a stick insect. Though, in my experience, men prefer that. Mr. Gallagher must be an anomaly.

To: S_Mercer1990

From: WickedWanderer

I applaud Mr. Gallagher’s taste, myself. A real man wants something to grab hold of in the night.

To: S_Mercer1990

From: WickedWanderer

Too much?

To: S_Mercer1990

From: WickedWanderer

My deepest, apologies, Sarah. I’ve crossed a line. I’ll let you out of your contract, if I’ve made you uncomfortable.

To: WickedWanderer

From: S_Mercer1990

I’m still not convinced you’re telling me the truth. Perhaps your Mr. Gallagher will seduce me into a torrid affair with an Irishman, and I’ll find out for myself.

To: S_Mercer1990

From: WickedWanderer

Mr. Gallagher isn’t the only Irishman available for torrid flings. I look forward to your arrival, Sarah. Stop by Wild Irish, the pub in Ceanmore, for the key when you arrive…and for whatever else you might need.

Chapter One

When a white-hot bolt of lightning speared the ground in front of her, Sarah Mercer decided that she’d officially gone insane.

Hands gripping the steering wheel so tightly that her knuckles were white, she slowly inched forward through the onslaught of rain. Yes, she had to be crazy. Why else would she be driving through a torrential downpour in a strange country at night, on the wrong damn side of the road?

Squinting into the darkness, Sarah swore when the tires of her rental car skidded in the pools of water on the road. If she believed in such things, she might have thought that this rain was an omen, a sign that she didn’t belong here. No, she belonged back in Boston, spending her days as a highly respected curator at a very prestigious auction house, and her evenings in the quiet condo close to Newbury Street, the one she’d chosen so she could wander in and out of the densely packed art galleries as much as she chose.

The young woman she’d sublet her little condo to could be wandering those art galleries now. Would she wander them with a boyfriend? Or would she be by herself, the way Sarah had been since that douche canoe Ross had left her?

No, that wasn’t fair. Ross had been dissatisfied with their relationship, and so he had done the rational thing by calling off their engagement. She should be thanking him, since marrying someone who felt their partnership was unsatisfactory was hardly the sensible thing to do.

These flashes of pure crimson rage and subsequent panic attacks had led to rash decisions. Not nipping them in the bud was why she’d lost her ever-loving mind and decided to rent an apartment—no, a flat—in the middle of nowhere, Ceanmore, Ireland, for two months.

The prudent, well-cultivated side of her brain screamed at her to turn the car around and hop the next flight back to the States. The other side—and until recently, she hadn’t even been aware that there was another side—told her that she’d come this far, and no way in hell was she going back now.

She’d been abandoned for a newer model, never mind that she was hardly at her expiration date herself. She supposed she was allowed to be a little upset.

Plus, the GPS on her cell was useless out here where it couldn’t pick up a signal—or call anyone for that matter. Logic told her that her destination was probably closer than the three-hour drive back to Dublin. The best course of action would be to continue down the road until she reached a gas station or a house—any place where she could stop for a few minutes to catch her breath. She was tired—the kind of bone-deep fatigue that came from waking up in one time zone and being plonked down in another one hours later. She probably shouldn’t even have driven—the smart thing to do would have been to stay the night at a hotel by the airport in Dublin.

She was sick of doing the smart thing.

A few more minutes of terrified driving and she thought she saw the pale cream color of headlights in the distance. With a lot of deep breathing and only one terrified shriek when she almost went off the road, Sarah finally turned onto the quiet street of what appeared to be a small town. Hands starting to tremble, she pulled the car to the side of the road. And then, realizing her error, she did a U-turn and parked on the side of the road that she was supposed to be on, the opposite one from back home.

This is going to be a challenge.

Yeah. That was putting it mildly.

She closed her eyes for a moment, sucked in a deep breath, and held it until her lungs started to burn, then she exhaled on a giant whoosh, picturing all of the bad things in her life leaving her body.

The breakup. The disappointments. She tried willing it all away, imagining it dancing off into the dark night.

I’m here. She might be crazy for coming to Ireland. She might go insane in the quiet of the small village and want to go screaming back to her trendy condo, her comfortable circuit of art galleries, the Chinese restaurant on the corner where she picked up a standing order of wonton soup and tea every Friday after work. But she was here for two months. No high-pressure job at the auction house to worry about, no fiancé to please. For the next few months, she was free.

The notion was absolutely terrifying.

It’s not like I’m wasting months of my life. I need to pull it together.

This was true enough. In coming to Ireland, Sarah had hoped to clear her mind enough to put some energy toward earning her masters in Art History. It seemed like forever ago that she had gotten her undergraduate degree. What Sarah had really wanted was to be a painter herself, but her parents had scared her into going the sensible route. Her art history degree earned her job at the auction house. The position had paid enough for to afford her trendy apartment.

But, somehow, it had never been enough. Sarah was hoping her masters would help to fill the gap. To make her forget how she’d been told she had the talent but lacked the courage to step out on her own.

And these were deep thoughts when she was jet-lagged and completely out of her element. It was in the air, she decided. The air here was so crisp, so clean, so completely unlike the nearly constant scent of exhaust back home.

Her body didn’t know what to do with so much oxygen, and it was making her dizzy.

Opening her eyes, Sarah squinted, trying to see through the rain. She had parked in front of a restaurant with bright lights behind foggy windows, and she could hear the faint lilt of what she supposed was Irish music—a place where she could go in and ask for directions to Ceanmore, or find a room for the night.

Instead, Sarah found herself glued to her seat, the nerves that she’d run across the ocean to escape coiling tightly in her belly and threatening to make her explode.

This—none of this was right. In no version of the plan for her future had she noted get dumped by fiancé and run to foreign country. And she was the kind of person who made plans. Plans and lists. Spreadsheets.

She was not the kind of person to rent an apartment over the internet. Not the kind of person to pursue renting that apartment—sorry, flat—after a brief and completely inappropriate flirtation with her future landlord.

Who flirted with someone they’d never met? This Cian Murphy seemed fine with it, but it was yet one more thing that cast Sarah so far off-balance she was surprised she didn’t fall.

But when she forced herself to wrench open the car door, when she made herself step out into the never-ending freaking rain to be promptly drenched from head to toe, she stood solidly. The wind that chilled her cheek was cruel enough to have her scurrying on stiff legs to the door of the place, where a sign proclaimed it Wild Irish.

The pub Cian had told her to stop at to collect her keys. Which meant, she supposed, that he was in there to collect the keys from.

There were those butterflies again, dancing a jig in her belly. Only she would get flustered by an online flirtation that the man himself probably didn’t remember.

Other than the lilt of music and the patter of the rain, the street was utterly silent. It was so very different from what Sarah was used to. Back in Boston, in her über-chic neighborhood, the noise outside her bedroom window was nonstop—cars honking, people shouting and laughing, music drifting into the air from the bars and cafes and the buskers on every corner. There was so much sound, all the time, that she hadn’t realized how much she’d tuned it out until just now, standing in near silence.

That silence, and the startling contrast of it to home, seemed suddenly so loud that her ears rang. The realization was enough to make her yank open the door of the building and step into the pub.

After the wet chill in the street, the noise indoors was like a warm embrace. Standing just inside the door, she looked around with wide eyes, taking in the details and cataloging them in her brain the way she’d always done.

The room was large but cozy, with a smoky-smelling fire burning in a fireplace big enough for her to stand in. It cast interesting shadows throughout the dimly-lit room, flickering over and lending warmth to the faces of the patrons. The walls, wide stripes of weathered wood, had darkened with age, and Sarah guessed that if she pressed her nose up to the rough grain, they’d smell of the smoke and whiskey they’d absorbed over the years. Scarred wooden tables with mismatched chairs were crowded throughout without much thought to symmetry. Her fingers started itching to move them into some sort of order, but here the result was more charming than messy, as

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