Hello everyone! Cynthia Owens here. I’m so pleased
to be back at the The Celtic Rose to introduce Deceptive Hearts, the first book in my new Wild Geese Series, which
has just been released from Highland Press.
The Wild Geese Series revolves around five life-long friends who met on
a coffin ship bound for America from famished Ireland. They grew up together on
the mean streets of New York City, and when the American Civil War began, they
joined up with Thomas Francis Meagher to fight with the Irish Brigade.
But now the war is over, and they’re ready to re-start their lives – and
find new love.
Deceptive Hearts is Shane
MacDermott’s story. A former boxing champion and a hero at Bull Run, he returns
to New York City to take up his old life as a member of the Metropolitan Police
Force. When he meets Lydia Daniels, a beautiful, wealthy and mysterious society
lady, he begins to suspect she’s running a high-class brothel from her elegant
Gramercy Park home.
…Like the Wild Geese of Old Ireland, five boys grew to
manhood despite hunger, war, and the mean streets of New York…
He survived war, and returned to devastation
A hero of the Irish Brigade, Shane MacDermott returned
home to New York to find his family decimated and his world shattered.
She risks her life to save the people she loves
Lydia Daniels will risk anything to protect the women she
shelters beneath the roof of her elegant Gramercy Park mansion—even if she has
to trust the one man who can destroy her.
Shane and Lydia both harbor secrets that could destroy
them – and put their lives in jeopardy. Can their love overcome their carefully
guarded deceptive hearts?
And here’s an excerpt from Deceptive Hearts:
The
Atlantic Ocean, Black ’47
The ship Sally
Malone bucked and groaned and almost upended him. Shane MacDermott halted
in his tracks for the fraction of a second it took to steady himself before he
scurried down the crowded passageway.
“Easy there, laddie.” The gap-toothed old man
reached out a bony hand to steady him. “These rough seas’ll knock ye off yer
feet, sure as the devil.”
Intent on his mission, Shane nodded a brief thanks
and hurried on, carefully picking his way through the narrow, crowded aisle,
one skeletal arm cupped protectively around the dipperful of warm, brackish
water.
“All this rolling and tossing does make walking
terrible difficult,” another woman, one of the strange community that had
sprung up in this miserable, stinking hole, commiserated.
Shane barely noticed, and didn’t speak. He had to
bring the water for Da. Had to help Ma dribble the few drops through his
parched lips, praying they might just break the terrible fever that held his
father in its deathly grip.
His mother looked up at his approach, a smile
lighting her haggard face. Shane looked at her closely and shook his head in
sadness. She was that thin a gust of wind could blow her off the ship and away
back to the Cove of Cork.
“Ah, my Shane, ‘tis a fine lad ye are.” Ma’s blue,
blue eyes, the only bit of color in her pale face, glowed with love as she took
the dipper from his trembling hands.
He reckoned they’d been on this dreadful ship for
five torturous weeks. Shane collapsed on the narrow wooden bunk, too weary to
notice the miasma of vomit, urine and unwashed bodies. His younger brother and
baby sister stared vacantly at him.
He gazed into their gaunt faces. They’d left Ireland
for a better life in America, but a sudden terrible fear swept over him. Would
any of them live to see it?
“Shane.” His mother’s voice penetrated his terror.
“Shane, yer da’s askin’ for ye.”
Shane jumped up and hurried to the bunk where his
father lay, his burly blacksmith’s frame shrunken, perspiration dotting his
waxen forehead.
“Shane.” Da reached out blindly. “Shane, me lad.”
“I’m here, Da.” Struggling to keep his voice steady,
Shane clasped his father’s hand as tightly as he could. “I’m here.”
“You’re a good lad, Shane,” his father rasped around
his swollen tongue. “Always…helped…me…”
Tears threatened to blind Shane, but he blinked them
back furiously and swiped a grimy hand across his nose. He was ten years old
now. He wouldn’t let Da see him cry!
He opened his mouth to speak, but all that emerged
was a squeak. Da didn’t hear, for he was struggling to speak again.
“Look after them, son,” he begged. His voice, once a
hearty boom, was no more than a papery whisper as he struggled against the
demon fever. But his dark eyes blazed with passion, searing Shane’s soul. “Look
after…yer ma. Look after…the family. Help them…when ye get…to…Amerikay.
Keep…them…safe.”
“I will, Da,” Shane vowed fiercely around the
strangling lump in his throat. “I promise I’ll look out for Ma and the little
ones.”
“Love…ye, lad. Ye’re…me heart’s…pride…”
The tears he could hold back no longer coursed down
Shane’s face as he watched his father’s eyes close for the last time.
And Shane MacDermott vowed he’d never—never—let anything harm another person
he loved.
Buy Deceptive Hearts: