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I’m not usually a big fan of relationships built on lies but I just LOVE the sound of this one. ย So anxious to find out why Lawrence is thought to be mad!

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lawrence-browne-affair-coverThe Lawrence Browne Affair

by Cat Sebastian

Releasing February 7, 2017

Avon Impulse

Blurb:

An earl hiding from his future . . .ย 

Lawrence Browne, the Earl of Radnor, is mad. At least, thatโ€™s what he and most of the village believes. A brilliant scientist, he hides himself away in his familyโ€™s crumbling estate, unwilling to venture into the outside world. When an annoyingly handsome man arrives at Penkellis, claiming to be Lawrenceโ€™s new secretary, his carefully planned world is turned upside down.

A swindler haunted by his past . . .

Georgie Turner has made his life pretending to be anyone but himself. A swindler and con man, he can slip into an identity faster than he can change clothes. But when his long-dead conscience resurrects and a dangerous associate is out for blood, Georgie escapes to the wilds of Cornwall. Pretending to be a secretary should be easy, but he doesnโ€™t expect that the only madness he finds is the one he has for the gorgeous earl.

Can they find forever in the wreckage of their lives?ย 

Challenging each other at every turn, the two men soon give into the desire that threatens to overwhelm them. But with one man convinced he is at the very brink of madness and the other hiding his real identity, only true love can make this an affair to remember.

Goodreads Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30226770-the-lawrence-browne-affair

Buy Links:ย  ย  ย  AMAZON | B & N | GOOGLE | ITUNES | KOBO

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Excerpt:

Cornwall, 1816

CHAPTER ONE

All this fuss about a couple of small explosions. As far as Lawrence cared, the explosions were entirely beside the point. He had finished experimenting with fuses weeks ago. More importantly, this was his house to burn to the ground if thatโ€™s what he wanted to do with it. Hell, if he blew the godforsaken place up, and himself right along with it, the only person who would even be surprised was the man sitting before him.

โ€œFive servants quit,โ€ Halliday said, tapping Lawrenceโ€™s desk in emphasis. Dust puffed up in tiny clouds around the vicarโ€™s fingertips. โ€œFive. And you were woefully understaffed even before then.โ€

Five fewer servants? So that was why the house had been so pleasantly quiet, why his work had been so blissfully undisturbed.

โ€œThere was no danger to the servants. You know I keep them away from my work.โ€ That was something Lawrence insisted on even when he wasnโ€™t exploding things. The very idea of chattering maids underfoot was enough to discompose his mind even further. โ€œAnd I conducted most of the actual explosions out of doors.โ€ Now was probably not the time to mention that he had blown the roof off the conservatory.

โ€œAll Iโ€™m suggesting is a sort of secretary.โ€ Halliday was dangerously unaware of how close he was to witnessing an explosion of the metaphorical variety. โ€œSomebody to keep records of what youโ€™ve mixed together and whether itโ€™s likely toโ€โ€”he puffed his cheeks out and made a strange noise and an expansive gesture that Lawrence took to represent explosionโ€”โ€œignite.โ€

The Reverend Arthur Halliday did not know what was good for him. If he did, he would have fled the room as soon as he saw Lawrence reach for the inkwell. Lawrenceโ€™s fingers closed around the object, preparing to hurl it at the wall behind the vicarโ€™s head. Sod the man forย even suggesting Lawrence didnโ€™t know how to cause an explosion. He hadnโ€™t invented Browneโ€™s Improved Black Powder or even that bloody safety fuse through blind luck, for Godโ€™s sake.

โ€œBesides,โ€ Halliday went on, โ€œyou said you need an extra set of hands for this new device youโ€™re working on.โ€

Oh, damn and blast. Lawrence knew he shouldnโ€™t have told the vicar. But he had hoped Halliday might volunteer to help with the device himself, not badger Lawrence into hiring some stranger. The vicar was convenient enough, and when he wasnโ€™t dead set on sticking his nose where it didnโ€™t belong, he wasnโ€™t entirely unpleasant company.

โ€œIโ€™ve had secretaries,โ€ Lawrence said from between gritted teeth. โ€œIt ends badly.โ€

โ€œWell, obviously, but thatโ€™s because you go out of your way to terrify them.โ€ Halliday glanced pointedly at the inkwell Lawrence still held.

And there again was Halliday missing the point entirely. Lawrence didnโ€™t need to go out of his way to frighten anyone. All he had to do was simply exist. Everyone with any sense kept a safe distance from the Mad Earl of Radnor, as surely as they stayed away from rabid dogs and coiled asps. And explosive devices, for that matter.

Except for the vicar, who came to Penkellis Castle three times a week. He likely also called on bedridden old ladies and visited the workhouse. Maybe his other charity cases were grateful, but the notion that he was the vicarโ€™s good deed made Lawrenceโ€™s fingers curl grimly around the inkwell as he plotted its trajectory through the air.

โ€œIโ€™ll take care of the details,โ€ Halliday was saying. โ€œIโ€™ll write the advertisement and handle the inquiries. A good secretary might even be able to manage the household a bit,โ€ the vicar said with the air of a man warming to his topic, โ€œget it into a fit condition for the childโ€”โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Lawrence didnโ€™t raise his voice, but he slammed his fist onto the desk, causing ink to splatter all over the blotter and the cuff of his already-inky shirt. A stack of papers slid from the desk onto the floor, leaving a single dustless patch of wood where they had been piled. Out of the corner of his eye he saw a spider scurry out from under the papers.

โ€œTrue,โ€ Halliday continued, undaunted. โ€œA housekeeper would be more appropriate, butโ€”โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Lawrence felt the already fraying edges of his composure unraveling fast. โ€œSimon is not coming here.โ€

โ€œYou canโ€™t keep him off forever, you know, now that heโ€™s back in England. Itโ€™s his home, and heโ€™ll own it one day.โ€

When Lawrence was safely dead and buried, Simon was welcome to come here and do what he pleased. โ€œI donโ€™t want him here.โ€ Penkellis was no place for a child, madmen were not fit guardians, and nobody knew those facts better than Lawrence himself, who had been raised under precisely those conditions.

Halliday sighed. โ€œEven so, Radnor, you have to do something about this.โ€ He gestured around the room, which Lawrence thought looked much the same as ever. One hardly even noticed the scorch marks unless one knew where to look. โ€œIt canโ€™t be safe to live in such a way.โ€

Safety was not a priority, but even Lawrence wasnโ€™t mad enough to try to explain that to the vicar.

โ€œVillagers wonโ€™t even walk past the garden wall anymore. And the stories they invent…โ€ The vicar wrung his hands. โ€œA secretary. Please. It would ease my mind to know you had someone up here with you.โ€

A keeper, then. Even worse.

But Lawrence did need another set of hands to work on the communication device. If Halliday wouldnโ€™t help, then Lawrence had no other options. God knew Halliday had been right about the local people not wanting anything to do with him.

โ€œFine,โ€ he conceded. โ€œYou write the advertisement and tell me when to expect the man.โ€ Heโ€™d say what he needed to in order to end this tiresome conversation and send the vicar on his way.

It wasnโ€™t as if this secretary would last more than a week or two anyway. Lawrence would see to that.

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catAuthor Info:

Cat Sebastian lives in a swampy part of the South with her husband, three kids, and two dogs. Before her kids were born, she practiced law and taught high school and college writing. When she isn’t reading or writing, she’s doing crossword puzzles, bird watching, and wondering where she put her coffee cup.

Author Links:ย ย  WEBSITE | FACEBOOK | TWITTER | GOODREADS

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Giveaway:

One eBook copy of THE LAWRENCE BROWNE AFFAIR

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/521ac4c81215/

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