by JoAnn Ross
“I always believed you,” Rachel said. “Just as I always believed Cooper would find a way to prove that. Which was all the more reason not to hold your best friend hostage in a house surrounded by heavily armed law enforcement officers.”
Jake rubbed his grizzled jaw as he gave Rachel a long, appraising look. Then glanced up at Cooper. “Your woman speaks her mind,” he said finally.
“That she does,” Cooper agreed.
“Probably going to be a handful.”
Cooper grinned. “I’m counting on it.”
Jake shook his head. “Everyone always said you Murphys are crazy.”
“That’s what they say, all right,” Cooper acknowledged cheerfully.
“Takes all kinds,” Jake muttered with another shake of his head. “You two take your time to work things out between you. Guess I’d best go turn myself in.”
Cooper reached out and put a hand on the smaller man’s shoulder. “I’ll do what I can to get you a reduced sentence for this latest escapade,” he said. “But you’re definitely going to have to start going to AA.”
“So long as I know my land’s gonna be here when I get out, I don’t mind giving up the bottle and spending some time in jail.” He looked at Rachel. “You gonna be doing the cooking?”
“Yes. Although after what you put everyone through this morning, I’m not sure you’re going to like it.”
Jake’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. “You wouldn’t.”
Rachel nodded. “I certainly would,” she threatened. “We’re talking bait.”
“Mebee I can swing a deal to get sent to the State pen,” he mumbled, shuffling through the snow toward the approaching cops.
“Bait?” Cooper asked, putting his arm around Rachel’s waist.
“It’s a long story.”
“I’ve plenty of time.”
“That’s right. If I remember correctly, you said something about fifty or sixty years,” she said as they walked back toward the throng of onlookers.
“At least.” He lifted her left hand. The stone sparkled in the bright winter sunshine. “I like this ring. It looks kind of familiar.”
Rachel tilted her head back to smile up at him. “I like it, too. So much that I’ve decided to stick around for the matching earrings.”
“Greedy,” Cooper teased as he nibbled lightly on her smiling lips.
Rachel threw her arms around his neck. “Wait until I get you home alone,” she promised. “And you’ll find out exactly how greedy I can be.”
A rousing cheer went up from the gathered spectators as their lips met and clung.
“Come on, Sheriff.” She linked arms with him as they continued toward his Jeep. Mitzi had already assured her she’d drive Rachel’s car back to her house. “I have breakfast waiting.”
“Sounds great,” Cooper said agreeably. “What are we having?”
Happy endings did exist after all, and not just in fairy tales. Rachel’s answering laugh was free and breezy.
“It’s a surprise.”
The End
Continue reading for an excerpt from A Sea Change . . .
A Sea Change
A Shelter Bay/Castlelough novel
JoAnn Ross
Sample Chapter © 2014
All Rights Reserved
1
Castlelough, Ireland
Although the microbrewery might be a new addition, Brennan’s Microbrewery and Pub had been serving rebels and raiders, smugglers and sailors, poets and patriots since 1650.
And, Sedona Sullivan considered as she watched a young couple share a kiss inside one of the two snugs by the front door, lovers. The leaded glass window kept people’s behavior reasonably sedate while the stained glass door allowed conversations to remain private.
Whiskey bottles gleamed like pirates’ booty in the glow of brass-hooded lamps, a turf fire burned in a large open hearth at one end of the pub, warming against the chill of rain pelting on the slate roof, and heavy wooden tables were crowded onto the stone floor. Booths lined walls covered in football flags, vintage signs, old photographs, and, in the library extension, books and magazines filled shelves and wall racks.
The man murmured something in the woman’s ear, causing her to laugh and toss hair as bright as the peat fire. As the woman lifted her smiling lips to his for a longer, more drawn-out kiss, Sedona felt a stir of envy.
How long had it been since a man had made her laugh with sexy abandon? How long since anyone had kissed her like that man was kissing the pretty Irish redhead?
Sedona did some quick mental math. Finding the sum impossible to believe, she recalculated. Twenty-two months, three weeks, and eight days? Seriously?
Unfortunately, given that she was, after all, a former CPA with excellent math skills and a near-photographic memory, Sedona knew her figures were right on the money. As where those additional sixteen hours she reluctantly tacked on to the initial subtotal.
How could that be possible?
Granted, she’d been busy. After leaving behind a high-powered accounting career in Portland, she’d opened a successful bakery in Shelter Bay, Castlelough’s sister city on the Oregon coast.
But still . . . nearly two years?
That was just too depressing.
Unlike last evening, when Brennan’s had been crowded to the ancient wooden rafters with family members and close friends enjoying Mary Joyce and J.T. Douchett’s rehearsal dinner, tonight the pub was nearly deserted, save for the two lovers, three men watching a replay of a rugby match on the TV bolted to the stone wall, and an ancient man somewhere between eighty and a hundred years old who was nursing a foam-topped dark ale and singing sad Irish songs to himself.
And there was Patrick Brennan, owner, bartender and cook, whose smiling Irish eyes were as darkly brown as the fudge frosting she’d made for the chocolate groom’s cake.
Which was what had brought Sedona to her ancestral homeland.
She’d met international movie star and award-winning screenwriter Mary Joyce when the Castlelough-born actress had visited Shelter Bay for a film festival featuring her movies. After Mary had gotten engaged to J.T., a former Marine who’d been pressed into service as the actress’ bodyguard, Mary had asked Sedona to make both the groom’s cake and the all-important wedding cake.
Happy to play a part in her friend’s wedding, Sedona had jumped at the chance to revisit the land of her ancestors.
A cheer went up as a player dressed in a green jersey from the Ireland Wolfhounds scored against the England Saxons. After delivering her wine and taking her order, Patrick paused on his way back to the bar long enough to glance up at the screen and even the old man stopped singing long enough to raise his mug before switching to a ballad celebrating a victory in some ancient, but never to be forgotten war.
Sedona was thinking that watching a game when you already knew the final score must be a male thing, when the heavy oak door opened, bringing with it a wet, brisk wind that sent her paper napkin sailing onto the floor.
Before she could reach down and pick it up, her attention was captured by the arrival of a man she had already determined to be trouble on a hot, sexy stick.
His wind-mussed hair, which gave him the look of having just gotten out of bed, fell to a few inches above his broad shoulders and was as black as the sea on a moonless night. As he took off his leather jacket, revealing a lean hard, well-muscled body, testosterone radiated off him in bone-weakening waves that had her glad she was sitting down.
“Well, would you look at what the night gale blew in,” Patrick greeted him from behind the bar. “I thought you were leaving town.”
“I was. Am,” Conn Brennan clarified in the roughened, gravely rocker’s voice recognizable the world over. “I’m flying out of Shannon to catch up with the lads in Frankfurt. But I had a sudden craving for fish and chips and sure, everyone knows there’s no finer food than the pub grub served up by my big brother at Brennan’s.”
Patrick laughed at that. “Sure
, with talk like that, some would think you’d be from Blarney,” he shot back on an exaggerated brogue. “So how did the party go? I assume the bride and groom enjoyed themselves?”
“The party was grand, in large part due to the music,” Conn Brennan said. The infamous bad boy rocker known by the single name Conn to his legion of fans around the world had been dubbed “Conn of the Hundred Battles” by tabloids for his habit for getting into fights with the paparazzi.
“As for the bride and groom, I image they’re shagging their brains out about now. The way they couldn’t keep their hands off each other had the local band lads making bets on whether they’d make it to bed before consummating the nuptials.”
The heels of his metal-buckled black boots rang out on the stone floor as he headed toward the bar, pausing when he almost stepped on Sedona’s dropped napkin. He bent to pick it up, then when he straightened, his startlingly neon blue eyes clashed with hers.
And held for a long, humming moment.
“Well, fancy seeing you here. I would have guessed, after the busy day you’ve had, that you’d be all tucked away in your comfy bed at the inn, dreaming of wedding cakes, sugar plums, and all things sweet.”
He placed the napkin on the table with a dangerously sexy smile he’d directed her way more than once as he’d rocked the reception from the bandstand. When an image of a bare-chested Conn sprawled on her four-poster bed at the inn flashed wickedly through Sedona’s mind, something quivered deep in her stomach.
It was only hunger, she assured herself. Between putting the last touches on the towering wedding cake and working with the serving staff during the reception, she hadn’t taken the time for a proper meal all day.
“I was in the mood for a glass of wine and a late bite.” Her tone, cool as wintry mist over the Burren, was in direct contrast to the heat flooding her body.
He lifted an ebony brow. “Why would you be wanting to go out in this rain? The Copper Beech Inn has excellent room service, and surely your suite came with a mini-bar well stocked with adult beverages.”
“You’re correct on both counts,” she acknowledged as the old man segued into “The Rare Auld Mountain Dew.”
She took a sip of wine, hoping it would cool the heat rising inside her.
It didn’t.
“But I chose to spend my last night in Ireland here at Brennan’s instead of an impersonal hotel room. Besides, you’re right about your brother’s food. It’s excellent.” While the pub grub menu might be casual dining, Patrick Brennan had proven to be as skilled in the kitchen as he was at pulling pints. “There’s also the fact that the mini bar is ridiculously expensive.”
“Ah.” He nodded his satisfaction. “Your parents didn’t merely pass down an Irish surname, Sedona Sullivan. It appears you’ve inherited our Irish frugality.”
“And here I thought that was the Scots.”
“It’s true that they’ve been more than happy to advertise that reputation, despite having stolen the concept from us. Same as they did the pipes, which were if truth be told, were originally intended as an Irish joke on the Scots, who, being dour people without any sense of humor, failed to get it.”
“And didn’t I recognize your famed Irish frugality the moment you roared into town in that fire-engine red Ferrari?”
He threw back his head and laughed, a rich, deep, sound that flowed over her and reminded her yet again exactly how much time had passed since she’d been with a man.
Your choice.
“And wouldn’t you be a prime example of appearances being deceiving?” he countered.
“Don’t be disturbing my guests, Conn,” Patrick called out.
“We’re just having a friendly conversation.” Conn’s eyes hadn’t left Sedona’s since he’d stopped at the table. “Am I disturbing you, a stór?”
Yes.
“Not at all,” she lied.
The truth was that she’d been feeling wired and edgy from the moment he strode into the hall for a sound check before the reception.
“Though you do force me to point out that I’m no one’s darling,” she tacked on. He’d undoubtedly used the generic Irish endearment the way American men used “babe” or “sweetheart.”
Even without having read about all the rich and famous women the rocker was reported to have been involved with, any sensible woman would keep her distance from Conn Brennan. Despite having grown up on a commune of former hippies and flower children, Sedona had always considered herself unwaveringly sensible.
Her knowledge of the endearment failed to put a dent in his oversized male ego. Instead, amusement danced in his electric blue eyes.
“Would you have learned that bit of Irish from some local lad attracted by your charms?” he asked as he rubbed a jaw darkened with a day-old stubble that added machismo to his beautiful face. “Which, may I say, despite your short time in our fair village, would not surprise me in the least.”
“My parents believe everyone should speak at least two languages,” she responded mildly. “I’m fluent in Spanish, know enough French to order a baguette and wine in Paris, and thanks to a year studying abroad at Trinity College Dublin, along with the past few days having an opportunity to practice, I can carry on a bit of a conversation in Irish.”
Raindrops glistened in his black hair as he tilted his head. “Mary wasn’t exaggerating when she was going on about your charms,” he said finally. “And aren’t brains and beauty an enticing combination? As for you not being my darling, Sedona Sullivan, the night’s still young.”
“Perhaps not for those in Dublin or Cork,” she said, struggling against the seductive pull of that smile. The rugby game ended with a score by the redshirted Saxons. The men who’d been watching the TV shuffled out, muttering curses about allegedly blind referees. “But if you don’t leave soon, you won’t be able to drive your fancy ‘frugal’ import to the airport because Castlelough’s cobblestone streets will have been rolled up.”
He gave her a longer, considering look, his intense blue eyes narrowing as he scrutinized her in silence for what seemed like forever, even as some part of her brain still managing to function told her must have only been a few seconds.
“Your order’s up,” he said, without having even glanced toward the bar. “Since Patrick’s occupied with my fish and chips, I’ll bring your late bite back with my ale.”
He smelled so amazing, like night rain darkened with the scent of leather and the tang of sweat from having played as energetically for his home town crowd of a hundred wedding guests as he had to his recent sell-out crowd of ninety thousand in London’s Wembley Stadium.
Tamping down a reckless urge to lick his dark neck, Sedona forced a faint smile.
“Thank you. We certainly wouldn’t want your fish to burn while your brother’s distracted delivering my meal.”
Assuring herself that there wasn’t a woman on the planet who’d be capable of not checking out the very fine butt in those dark jeans, she watched his long, lose-hipped outlaw’s stride to the bar.
Not wanting to be caught staring as he returned with his dark ale and her plate, she turned her gaze back to the couple in the snug. The woman was now sitting on the man’s lap as they tangled tonsils.
Why didn’t they just get a damn room?
“Now there’s a pair who know how to make the most of a rainy night,” Conn said as he sat down across from her.
There was no way she was going to respond to that.
Instead, she turned her attention to the small white plate of deep fried cheese served on a bed of salad greens with a side of dark port and berry sauce. The triangular piece of cheese that had been fried in a light-as-a-feather beer batter nearly made her swoon.
As she’d discovered when making her cakes, Irish dairy farmers seemed to possess a magic that churned milk into pure gold. “This is amazingly delicious.”
“The French claim to make the best cream and butter, but I’d put ours against theirs any day. That St. Brigid’s cheese
you’re eating is a local Camembert from Michael Joyce’s farm.”
Michael was Mary Joyce’s older brother. Sedona had met the former war correspondent turned farmer and his American wife at a dinner at the Joyce family home her first night in Castlelough.
“And speaking of delicious,” he said, “I’m remiss in not telling you that your cake had me tempted to lick my plate.”
“Thank you.” When his words brought back her earlier fantasy of licking his neck, she felt color rising in her cheeks.
“Of course, I wouldn’t have,” he continued, thankfully seemingly unaware of her wicked, too tempting thoughts. “Because I promised Mary.”
“You promised Mary you wouldn’t lick your dessert plate?”
“No, despite being an international movie star, Mary can be a bit of a stickler for propriety. So I promised to behave myself.”
He waited a beat, just long enough to let her know something else was coming. “Which was the only reason I didn’t leave a set to the lads and dance with you at the reception.”
“Well, no one can fault you for your confidence.”
“Would you be saying you wouldn’t have given me a dance? If I hadn’t been performing and had asked?”
Dance with this man? From the way he’d watched her from the bandstand, his eyes like blue flames, Sedona had a feeling that dancing wasn’t precisely what he’d had in mind.
“I came here to work,” she said. “Not dance.” Nor hook up with a hot Irish musician.
“It was a grand cake,” he said. “Even better than the one I was served at the White House.” Where he’d received a presidential medal for his social activism, Sedona remembered. “And one of the few that tasted as good as it looked. Most cakes these days seem to have Spackle spread over them.”
She laughed at the too true description. “That’s fondant, which creates a smoother surface to decorate.”
“It’s shite is what it is. When I was growing up, my mam’s carrot cake always won first prize at the county fair. With six children in the family, we’d all have to wait our turn to lick the bowl or she’d never have ended up with enough frosting to cover it, but I always believed that cream cheese frosting was the best part.”