Hart Street Lane (Return to Dublin Street #3) Read Online Samantha Young

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Erotic, Sports Tags Authors: Series: Return to Dublin Street Series by Samantha Young
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Total pages in book: 121
Estimated words: 115308 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 577(@200wpm)___ 461(@250wpm)___ 384(@300wpm)
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I didn’t particularly want to face Becky right now, but I’d emailed Liza several times for the customer feedback document this week. Before Becky’s arrival, Liza and I had gotten along great. She was a wonderful assistant buyer and eager to work her way up. However, ever since she and Becky got buddy-buddy, our working relationship had deteriorated. I hated confrontation, so I was trying my best to avoid out-and-out reprimanding her.

Thankfully, Becky was nowhere in sight, but Liza was standing by the coffee machine, flirting with David from accounts.

“Liza.”

She turned slowly, not quite meeting my eyes. “Maia.”

“I need the customer survey report ASAP.”

“Yeah, I’ll get to that this afternoon.”

“It’s not done?”

She stiffened. “We’ve had other things to prioritize. The trend forecast, for starters.”

“I want the customer survey report by noon.”

When she didn’t move, I bit back my irritation. “Now, Liza. Please and thank you.”

She shot David a petulant look and then moved past, avoiding my gaze. “Whatever,” I heard her mutter under her breath.

It was loud enough for David to hear because he gave me a What the hell? look.

And all I could think was: Fuck my life.

Seriously. Fuck. My. Life.

CHAPTER FOUR

MAIA

Ididn’t know how I made it through work that day. Autopilot switched into gear, and I tackled tasks while my mind cooried up in the corner in panic mode. How the hell was I supposed to get out of this idiotic campaign without losing everything? I’d chosen not to tell Hilary the truth about Will just yet because I had to believe there was a way to get out of it without humiliating myself in the process. One positive was that it did, for the first time in a month, distract me from the hurt in my heart.

Liza, thankfully, emailed the report I wanted, but I could feel the frost even in her three-sentence email.

Becky approached during my lunch hour to congratulate me. I could tell by the smug gleam in her eyes that she knew I was miserable. The urge to unleash the past month of emotions on her was real, but ever the professional, I nodded along to whatever she said, dissociating so I wouldn’t claw off her face.

By the time I’d walked up through the wide, perfectly symmetrical Georgian streets of New Town and then downward onto Hart Street, my pulse raced as my mind whirred with possible solutions. Hart Street was two rows of Georgian terraced homes and black wrought iron gated facades. There were a couple of new architectural additions to the street. Near the top of the road, there was a lane between the buildings called Hart Street Lane. Unlike the Gothic, creepy alleyways up on Old Town, this narrow lane was a well-lit, flower box–laden pathway into the back of the homes.

It had a tree-surrounded courtyard and in the middle of the clearing what had once been an old schoolhouse was now four flats. There was a main entrance, with two flats on the ground floor. My flat was on the top floor across the landing from my neighbor Geri Mills. Geri was a seventy-eight-year-old artist and self-proclaimed spinster. She said spinster had always been a filthy word, but she took pride in the fact that she’d lived a happy, sex-filled life without being “bogged down by the terrible business of marriage and cohabitation.”

“That’s what spinsterhood really is, my dear. Happiness,” she’d told me a few months after I moved into my flat. “A beautiful girl like you ought to have lots of sex, but never tie yourself down to one person.”

Suffice it to say, Geri did not congratulate me when Will and I got engaged.

She probably would once I told her the engagement was off.

The thought made my stomach drop as I glanced at her door before unlocking mine.

It was a two-bedroom flat, it had high ceilings and a bay window that mostly looked out at tree branches, making me feel like I was anywhere but in the middle of the city. It was a little dark because we were surrounded by foliage and buildings, but it was cocooned away from all the hustle and bustle.

As I pressed a hand to the hallway wall for balance to loosen my ankle-strapped high heels, my attention snagged on my photograph wall. For years, I grew up in a home with no family portraits.

With no family, really.

When I moved in with Dad and Grace, I’d become almost obsessive about cataloguing life and displaying my happy memories. Will called my wall of photographs “clutter.”

It wasn’t clutter to me. It was the visual representation of a life I was grateful for because it hadn’t always been this way.

My handsome dad and beautiful Grace. My wee brother Lachlan who grew up so fast across those pictures on the wall. A baby in my arms when I was seventeen. A teenager last Christmas, his arms crossed over his chest as I squeezed him into my side for a cuddle for the camera. My face was lit up with laughter because he was so annoyed by the affection.


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