Real life is no place for fairy tales…
Kristin Hart has romantic notions of Scotland. Yet she never expects to find a real-life Scotsman in her Vermont hometown! Despite her instant connection with him, Malcolm MacDowell isn’t the Prince Charming she thought. Because no prince would shut down her factory—the one that means everything to her town.
Really, she has no choice. Kristin hops on the next flight to Edinburgh, determined to convince Malcolm her workplace should remain open. But the distraction of the man is almost too much. Still, the magic of the Highlands makes anything seem possible…even a happily ever after of her own.
She had trusted him, had brought him home to her family
Kristin turned back to Malcolm. He had kissed her, too. And for the first time in a long time, Kristin had actually let herself imagine…those kinds of thoughts about someone.
“Kristin,” Malcolm murmured. “Let me just explain.”
But her ears were buzzing harder. She couldn’t hear so well anymore. Malcolm was saying something to the receptionist, ushering her out, closing the door.
“Tell me the truth,” Kristin managed to whisper. “Who are you?”
His Adam’s apple moved up and down. “John Sage is my uncle,” he said quietly.
She felt numb all over. Maybe she was in shock.
He had betrayed her. All along, he had lied to her about who he was and why he was in her plant, and at her home. He had made a fool of her in front of everybody who mattered to her.
She clutched her stomach. So many emotions rose in her, she was being overwhelmed by them all. She had wanted to believe in him so much.…
Dear Reader,
Thanks for picking up The Sweetest Hours, my fourth book in the Mills & Boon Superromance line.
This story was inspired by my love for all things Scottish. In it, Kristin Hart, a young industrial engineer for a shampoo-and-body-products company, shows up in her Vermont factory one day to find a sexy, mysterious Scotsman in her office, sitting at her desk.
From there, it’s off to Scotland for an adventure of her lifetime. Along the way, she traverses the countryside, stays at a castle, attends a Scottish wedding and falls in love with Malcolm, the Highlander of her heart.
I hope you enjoy!
All the best,
Cathryn Parry
The Sweetest Hours
Cathryn Parry
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Cathryn Parry is the author of four Mills & Boon Superromance books. A former engineer, she lives in New England with her husband and her neighbor’s cat, Otis. In addition to writing, she enjoys conducting genealogy research, working on her figure-skating moves and traveling as often as possible. Please see her website at www.cathrynparry.com.
To Lou, for everything.
To Karen Reid, my editor, for all the hard work and encouragement.
To my late grandmother, for providing the sword, the Scottish genes and the support during my childhood Highland Dance recitals. I haven’t forgotten.
Contents
CHAPTER ONE
KRISTIN HART HEARD the soft burr of a Scottish accent, and something inside her sang.
She crept closer to the edge of the open door and listened. A man spoke on the telephone. He was obviously not from around here. What was he doing in her small-town Vermont factory? And why was he in her boss’s office?
“...I cannot...I’m sorry you did not...” The man pronounced “cannot” like “canna” and “you” like “ye.”
Kristin missed most of the other words he said. But the man with the deep, rolling voice was Scottish—that was no mistake.
Her spirits brightened. For as long as she remembered, she’d wanted to travel and visit the country of her grandmother’s birth, the land of castles and Highlanders.
Take me away, she thought.
Kristin rubbed her arms and stared down the corridor, lined with boxes and the remnants of their labeling-machine going haywire.
Outside, it was a gray, late-January morning, threatening snow, and inside, the cold factory was dimly lit and quiet.
Besides her, there was only a skeleton shift: three hourly workers and Kristin. As production engineer she was supervising an emergency crew while they manually affixed labels to shipments that were already several days late. Kristin had opened the doors early that morning and let everyone in with a key not usually entrusted to her, since her plant was rarely open on the weekend.
At least her makeshift team was assembled from volunteers who wanted the overtime. Kristin was a salaried employee, and she had lost her day off. Like living in the movie The Breakfast Club, stuck in detention, Kristin had been ordered into the building on a Saturday. But she was determined to make the best of it and find the silver lining somewhere. The factory floor smelled great: like the jars of the honey body cream they labeled. The people she worked with were kind, too. Unlike Andrew, the plant manager, none of them gave her trouble.
Everything had been sailing along just fine, until she’d headed to the break room to grab a hot chocolate for Mindy from