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The Mystic Cove Series Boxed Set (Wild Irish Books 1-4) Page 4
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Page 4
"Excuse me, what is your name?" Keelin was miffed. She'd had her fill of rude strangers for the day.
"Flynn." He fiddled with some wires and went around to her driver's side. The car roared to life.
"Well, doesn't that just figure?" Even more unexplainably pissed, Keelin huffed out a breath.
"Well, Mr. Flynn, I kindly thank you for taking such time out of your day to help the likes of me. Could you spare a moment and tell me what was actually wrong with my car? If it isn't too much for you, sir?" Keelin could be sarcastic with the best of them.
"Loose ground wire was giving you an intermittent connection when you were trying to start it. I've tightened it. No charge." Flynn stared at her one more time and turned to go.
"Wait! Don't you want to know my name?" Keelin surprised herself and grabbed his hand. A surge of power slapped between their palms, heating her immediately, and her skin tingled. Sensations whiplashed through her and pooled low in her stomach. Shocked, Keelin stared into Flynn's angry face.
"I know exactly who you are, Keelin O'Brien." Flynn stomped off and whistled sharply. A dog that Keelin had not seen before ran from her perch on the boardwalk and walked by his side, turning its head to stare at her.
"Well, thanks! Thanks a lot! I'll be sure to write home about the amazing Irish hospitality!" Keelin yelled after him. Flynn lifted his hand in a "go away" gesture.
Chapter 6
Flynn's heart pounded in his chest as he whistled for Teagan and walked away from Keelin. Of course, he knew who she was. Over the past year, her image had haunted his dreams.
He let out a small sigh as he walked up the pier towards where his fishing boat was docked. Untying the line from the pier, he waited for Teagan to hop into the boat before he leaped away from the dock. Motoring slowly from the harbor, Flynn worked to bring his pulse under control.
Lush curves, molten brown eyes, and hair that he ached to see spread over his pillows flashed through his mind. Keelin was his fantasy girl. She'd stepped into his dreams a little over a year ago and Flynn had had a hard time not measuring every woman he had met since then to her.
To her. Some figment of his imagination. Until he'd caught a glance of a photo in Fiona's cottage and realized that his fantasy woman was none other than Fiona's estranged granddaughter, Keelin. Confusion had laced through him as he had stared down at the picture. Keelin, full of life and youth, laughed up at the camera from the grass that she sat on. She couldn't have been more than fourteen and her beauty only hinted at the woman she was to become. It had been like a punch to the gut when Flynn had realized that his dream girl was real.
Seeing her today, angry at her truck, Flynn had literally felt the world shift out from under him. How had he dreamed about her? How had he known?
His response to her in person was as visceral as in his dreams. He groaned as lust pooled low in his stomach and he ached to wrap Keelin in his arms. Yet, the fact that she had shown up in his dreams made him distrustful. How was it possible that he had known of her…her scent, her smile, her very essence…before ever meeting her?
What he didn't understand typically made him angry. Flynn liked a measure of control in his life. There was something about Keelin that made him want to throw caution to the wind and dive right in for a taste.
Scared that he was already too far gone, Flynn found himself gunning the engine and tearing out into the ocean. Away from the promise that Keelin hinted at.
Chapter 7
"What the hell was that?" Keelin thought. She was pissed. One surly Irishman had heated her blood more quickly than the last five Boston elites that her mom had set her up with. She chalked it up to a long dry spell in her love life and studied the directions on her paper. A flush crept up her cheeks. Damn that man for making her angry and hot in the same moment. She hadn't been this disturbed in a while.
Muttering under her breath, she pulled out into the street and almost hit a car in the right lane.
"Damn it!" Keelin whipped the wheel to the left and moved over. She made a note to calm down before driving here. She was bound to get herself hurt. Her truck chugged up the hill and onto a narrow road that wound deeper into the hills. Bushes and rocks concealed corners and most turns were blind. Keelin took deep breaths and drove slowly. Even so, she only narrowly caught the weathered sign. O'Brien's Road was etched on a small piece of wood, the red of the paint almost worn off.
"Here we go." Gravel coated the road and the truck shuddered as it worked itself over the bumps and grooves that furrowed the track up the hill. Keelin wound the truck higher up the hill, passing by worn fences and pastures dotted with spray-painted sheep. Why in the world were the sheep hot pink? Keelin made a note to ask someone about that.
Punk-rock sheep, she laughed to herself. Her friends back home in the Boston music scene would find that funny. She turned a blind corner and let out a shriek. A herd of sheep blocked her path and didn't appear to be in the mood to move.
Keelin laid on the horn. Nothing. They stared back at her balefully, and stood their ground.
She rolled down her window. "Hey. You. Get! Get out of here." Frustrated and figuring she had been tested enough, she moved the truck forward. The sheep bolted quickly and Keelin laughed. Now she was beginning to feel a little more like an Irishwoman.
Keelin turned another corner and her world opened up.
"Oh. Oh God. Oh, I just can't." Her voice caught in her throat and unexpected tears pricked at her eyes. The sheer beauty of the landscape before her was unapologetic in its magnificence. The stone hut was nestled by two rocky outcroppings to block the wind. Below the hut, the hills stretched wide before kissing the sea. The stunning green hills rolled down to arrogant cliffs that jutted into an almost perfect half-circle of a cove. Grace's Cove. A small sand beach lay in the dead center of the cove and a narrow path wound through the cliffs to the beach. The sun was blinding in its brilliance, diamonds of light shattered across the surface of the water and the green of the grass was a perfect contrast to the blue of the water that mirrored the same hue in the sky. Keelin felt like she was on top of the world.
I would never leave here if I didn't have to, she thought. As she turned to look around she began to make out the intricacies in the landscape. Various paths wandered in different directions over the hills, and stone markers were set at odd points throughout the land.
Was that a stone circle? Her eyes strained to make out what appeared to be a series of rocks set in a circle. The plant life was lush and there were various ribbons tied on bushes and flowers. A high brick wall segmented an area past the outcropping, and vines coated it. Keelin wondered what was past the wall.
So this is to be my home for a while? I can live with this. Keelin looked forward to an adventure for the summer, and where else could she get it but in this slice of heaven? Keelin put her backpack on and hefted her grocery sacks from the back of the truck. Turning, she looked at the mountains at her back. They rose behind her and sheltered the house, the land, and the cove. Keelin squinted. For a second she thought she saw a man and a dog high up on the ridge overlooking the house. Shaking her head, she looked again and the ridge was empty.
Keelin walked towards the hut. It was really quite a bit larger than a hut but Keelin liked the romantic thought of staying in a hut on the water's edge all summer. She would be sure to call it a hut to her friends back home. It was more of a wide square house that had two larger rooms jutting from the back. Built of round gray stones and dark wood beams, the house looked as if it was a part of the landscape. It was as if it was built for this land and this land alone.
Keelin wasn't sure if she should knock or not. It was just her here, right? She pulled the latch and went in. Light filtered through the single-paned windows, dust motes causing the light to shoot like beams across the worn farm table that stood in the middle of the room. The door opened directly into the main room, the hub of the house. One side was a small kitchen, with a wood-burning stove and a pantry. Two doors led off th
e back of the room and into what she presumed were bedrooms. The predominant focus of the room was the large table in the middle, which was riddled with jars, flowers, twine, and bowls. Keelin moved towards the table and noticed the walls were lined with shelves. Bottles upon bottles were stacked neatly on the shelves, and small labels were attached to them all. Keelin walked over to a shelf and saw powders of all sorts and colors. They looked like spices, but Keelin wouldn't be doing any taste tests anytime soon.
"So, you've finally arrived, then."
Keelin let out a screech and dropped her bags to the floor.
A chuckle came out of a dim corner to Keelin's right. She had missed this alcove when she had first walked in. A woman sat in a wooden rocker, the arms and back of the chair seemingly carved from a single piece of wood. Keelin wanted to sit in that chair. It hugged the woman in it and they rocked as if they were one. Keelin's own eyes peered at her from under an impressive head of long, curly gray hair. Her hair leaped and roped around her head, tied in areas with twine, with small flowers placed behind her ears.
Easily eighty years old, when Fiona smiled the years dropped from her face. She reminded Keelin of the hippies that often staged protests in the Boston Common. An earthiness clung to the old woman, yet a stillness and gentleness radiated from her. Her hands stuck out from a blue wool cape and were deftly tying twine around bunches of dried herbs. Paper labels were lined up neatly next to the bundles. The smell of lavender teased Keelin's nose and soothed her at the same time.
"Grandma?" It was a statement more than a question. There was no other person this woman could be.
"Well, yes, of course, Keelin. Who did you think it would be?" Fiona laughed up at Keelin and rose to embrace her. Another tiny woman, Keelin leaned over to embrace her awkwardly. She could feel her thin bones beneath the cape and instantly worried for her health.
"I'm just fine, Keelin. And call me Fiona," Fiona said with a smile. "Come, come. Let me feed you." Fiona bustled over to the small stove, where a pot was simmering. "I made extra for you today." She pulled brown bread from the ledge of the window, where it had been cooling in the open air, wrapped in a checkered kitchen towel.
"I'm sorry, but I thought you were, um, well, dead," Keelin stammered out.
"I know you did. Silly child, listening to your mother. Margaret certainly should have known that I was the only one who would send you that book. Ah, she always did like to make things difficult," Fiona said as she carefully measured a creamy chowder into brown stoneware bowls. Moving to the table, she placed the bowls on brightly colored mats, and brought the bread over with a dish of butter.
"Sit, sit. It's so nice to have company." Fiona happily chattered on and asked Keelin about her flight. "You're such a beauty, as I expected. You have the O'Brien coloring and stature – that strawberry-blonde hair, the brandy-colored eyes, and that body. You'll make a man very lucky someday."
Keelin stared at Fiona with her mouth open. She'd never been described in quite that way before. Her hair and eyes often received compliments. But her size-twelve frame and generous hips and bosom were not often complimented in the land of WASPs and stick-straight blondes that populated Boston.
"Um, thank you. Really. I'm sorry. Thank you and I'm not trying to be rude, but don't you think this was all a really dramatic way to get me to come here?" Keelin didn't like being surprised and was already on edge from a long day of travel. Having her grandmother for her summer roommate had not been in her plans.
Fiona sighed. "Well, you know the Irish are prone to a bit of drama, my dear. But, yes, I sincerely thought this was the best way to bring you here. It is time, after all."
"Okay, enough with this 'it is time' stuff. Time for what?" Keelin refused to sit. She felt like she was a part of some conspiracy and everyone was in on it but her.
"Well, time for you to claim your birthright, my dear. Now. Eat. There is plenty of time for talk. You need your sleep and your rest before we start your lessons first thing in the morning," Fiona said as she blew on her soup spoon.
"Lessons? I have a thesis to write, you know," Keelin said as she sat.
"Yes, dear. You'll have time for all that. Now, tell me about your mother." Fiona looked sweet, but she could certainly evade questions with the best of them. So this was where her mother had gotten it from, Keelin thought.
"Well, I'm glad you aren't dead," Keelin said, and sat down. The bowl of soup called to her and her stomach grumbled in response. Her first bite of the thick brown bread had her taste buds humming. They just didn’t make bread like this in the States.
Fiona laughed. "Yes, me as well. Now, tell me about Boston."
Keelin filled Fiona in on her life in Boston while she devoured two bowls of soup. She was famished. After dinner, Fiona started a small fire in the wood-burning stove and showed her to a small room at the back of the house.
"It isn't much, but should suit you just fine," Fiona said as she smoothed a brightly patched coverlet over pure white Irish linen sheets. The small bed was tucked beneath an alcove that offered a large window that overlooked the cove. A window across the room looked up to the mountain ridge above. A threadbare hooked rug covered the worn floorboards and a small table with a stoneware water pitcher stood in the corner. The simplicity of the room contrasted with the striking views and made it what it should be – a room solely about the world outside.
"This is beautiful, thank you." Keelin felt a rush of knowing. This was her room.
"Aye, yes, this is yours." Fiona looked at her. She knew. She moved towards the door. "Sleep, my dear. Sleep. There is much to learn."
Keelin put her bags on the floor and watched the last traces of light hug the water before the sun dipped off the edge. It felt like she had stepped into another lifetime. She quickly stripped, used the small attached bathroom, and put on a short tank and boy shorts to sleep in. The linen sheets were cool and smooth. They enveloped her, and the exhaustion of the day caught up with her. Keelin quickly drifted into a dreamless sleep.
She woke to dead quiet and confusion. Where was she? Disoriented, Keelin shot up and fumbled for her phone. She clicked it on and her eyes adjusted in the dim light. 3:00 a.m. Her time was all messed up. As her eyes adjusted to the room, she saw the bright moonlight shining through the window. Intrigued, she rose to her knees and leaned to look out over Grace's Cove. The stark cliffs highlighted the perfect half-circle of the cove. The ocean glowed to the horizon, reflecting the soft white light of the moon. Keelin loved nights like this. She had always dreamed of sailing in the path of the moon to lands undiscovered. Her eyes traced the light of the moon that trailed across the water and she gasped as she realized that the light stopped once it hit the cove. She stretched up and leaned forward more. That couldn't be right. It had to be a trick of the light or the angle of the house. The waters of the cove were dark. No reflection. How could that be? Keelin quietly lifted the glass window and leaned as far out as she could, her long hair tangled over her shoulders. The cove remained dark. A movement caught her eye. A dark animal raced across the field away from the cove. Was that a wolf? Did Ireland even have wolves? Keelin tried to pull herself back in quickly and caught her hair on the windowsill.
Damn it. She was always doing klutzy stuff like this. As she reached to untangle her hair, her eyes tracked the animal approaching her. With some trepidation, she worked quickly at the knot in the hair. Gasping, she glanced up as the wolf drew near and she realized a man was walking behind it. She had seen that walk before. Flynn walked with the ease of a man confident in his body…in his right to be on this land. She could swear that she saw the blue of his eyes glinting. Keelin looked down and realized the picture she made: her breasts were all but falling out of her thin tank top and she had no bra on. She looked up and his eyes seemed to bore into hers. A small hum pooled deep in her stomach. Her nipples tightened.
Furious, she ripped her hair from the sill and sat back, slamming the window. She could have sworn she heard his laughter. What
was Flynn doing out on their land at 3:00 a.m.? And why was the cove dark? Keelin's science mind couldn't come up with any explanation other than that the house was situated at an odd angle. Frustrated, and sexually aware, Keelin went back to sleep with thoughts of bright-eyed men and strange dogs drifting through her head.
Chapter 8
The smell of bacon and the growling of her stomach teased Keelin awake. What better way to wake up? Squinting, she saw that the light was mellow and the morning was young. She pulled on an old sweatshirt and her cottage socks and padded into the kitchen.
"Good morning, sleeping beauty. Did you rest well?" Fiona asked from the stove.
"Yes, Keelin, how did you sleep?" A deep male voice startled Keelin into brushing her hair out of her face. Flynn sat comfortably at the kitchen table, finishing a full Irish and drinking a pot of tea. His blue eyes glinted at her. Uncomfortable, Keelin crossed her arms in front of her chest and wished she had put on pajama pants. Her boy shorts barely covered her. She tried to surreptitiously tug her sweatshirt down while keeping her arm crossed over her chest.
Flynn watched her in amusement. She curled her upper lip at him. What was it about this man that made her want to swat at him?
"Breakfast, my dear?" Fiona smiled at her, a quiet joy radiating from her. She had a full kitchen and was happy as could be.
"Just tea, please." Keelin wasn't sure if she could bring herself to sit down to breakfast with Flynn. As if reading her mind, he smiled and got up, taking his dishes to the sink.
"Lovely as always, Fiona. Thanks for breakfast. Let me know if you need any other leaks patched up." Flynn kissed her grandmother gently and nodded to Keelin before leaving.
"Ugh, that man," Keelin huffed out, and grabbed a piece of bacon.