The Problem With Pretending Read Online Emma Hart

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Funny Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 128
Estimated words: 126850 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 634(@200wpm)___ 507(@250wpm)___ 423(@300wpm)
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“My name is William, and I did graduate from Oxford.”

“Great. Something I wanted to be wrong is right.”

He laughed and indicated, then pulled over to the side of the road, slightly wheeling onto the grass verge. He rested his forearm on the steering wheel and looked over at me. “Look, I’m sorry. If you want to go home, I’ll turn the car around, take you back to the airport, and forget this ever happened.”

I met his eyes for a moment then let my attention drift to the sign at the end of the road. It read Glenroch Castle, 200m.

“Is that the castle?” I asked, pointing at the sign.

He looked at it and nodded. “Yep.”

“And you’re willing to turn in the road right now, take me back to the airport, get me on another flight, and pretend we never met?”

“Yep.”

I blinked at the sign and then him.

Wow.

He was something else.

“Keep driving,” I said, shifting around to face the front of the car. “You’re not turning around now.”

“Are you sure?”

“William. Drive.”

He started the car. “Grace, I mean it.”

“Just drive.” I flapped my hand impatiently. “Go. Before I change my mind.”

Will waited for a second, looking at me out of the corner of his eye, then checked his mirrors and pulled away from the side of the road. “When you regret this in twenty-four hours, I’ll remind you of this conversation.”

“You won’t need to. I will never forget this conversation.”

We both laughed, but I wasn’t lying.

How had I ended up here?

Glenroch Castle itself wasn’t two hundred meters away, but that barely mattered as we approached. We were barely past the sign when the castle came into view. It was nestled in the hills, with the loch on one side and expansive gardens on the other.

The photos I’d seen did not do it justice.

Glenroch Castle really was a fairy-tale come to life. It was a mix of baroque, Palladian, and Gothic-style, with three main floors and a tower at all four corners, each with a conical roof that stretched high into the sky. Every window was slightly inset into the thick stone walls, framed by an arch, and as we drove closer along the long, sweeping driveway, I could see that the doors were huge, thick wood that was carved in a way I couldn’t make out from this distance.

The closer we got to the castle, the more imposing it appeared. Almost as if it were raised up from the rest of the ground around it, and even though we were driving up a gentle slope, we still weren’t quite getting close to it.

It was the most beautiful place I’d ever seen in my life.

And I’d grown up in an extravagant manor house, so it shouldn’t have been anything new to me, yet it was.

It was just… magical.

“Wow,” I whispered.

William dipped his chin as he pulled up outside the front of the castle. “Yeah, it’s something.”

“It’s beautiful,” I replied, smiling at it. “Truly.”

His lips twitched to the side, and he got out of the car. I knew I should wait for him, but I wanted to see the castle for myself without the window in the way, so I popped the door handle and pushed it open.

Will’s eyes flashed with amusement. “I was going to get that for you.”

“I know, but…” I leant against the door and took in the vision of the castle before me.

Look.

I’d seen castles.

Every British person was familiar with castles. They were everywhere, they were gorgeous, they were history. They were a part of us.

But some were special, and Glenroch Castle was… oh. So special.

“Oh, wow,” I whispered, gripping the top of the car door. “The pictures do not do this justice.”

He leant against the front of the car, lips tugged up on one side, and slowly bobbed his head. “Yes, it really is beautiful. I forget that sometimes, I think.”

I skirted my gaze across the entire castle, from the conical roofs of the towers to the middle part that seemed to stretch up two stories higher than the rest with a stone that gave away its much older build, to the doors.

That were opening.

“That’s my grandparents,” Will said quickly. “They saw us coming.”

I took a deep breath, picked up my handbag from the footwell of the car, and straightened my spine. “Let’s go.”

He looked at me. “What?”

“Let’s go.” I pushed the car door shut. “What, do you think they’re here for a picnic?”

Will pushed off the car and turned to me. “Grace, do you know—”

“William, you’re back!” The elegant, older woman in front of us preceded her husband in approaching us, holding her arms out wide in an obvious demand for a hug from her grandson.

She was clearly the Duchess of Glenroch.

Some people just had it. Whatever it was, she had it. That ooh-la-la, lah-di-dah.

It.

You know.

“Grandma. Sorry if I worried you.” Will hugged her back, and she released him in just enough time to look me over and smile.


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