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Falling for your Fake Boyfriend

Falling for your Fake Boyfriend

Whisper Cove Sweet Romance #1

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 25+ 5-Star Reviews

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Synopsis

First rule of fake dating: Never fall in love …

I agreed to fake date a handsome billionaire I just met over a bowl of spilled candy. (Yes, that’s really how it happened.)

“Why are you bringing a fake girlfriend along to your sister’s wedding? I mean, you’re more than tolerable to look at—”

It was the understatement of the century.

Luke Greyson was rich, sophisticated and gorgeous and now I, Isla Lovely—second oldest of the five Lovely sisters, resident of the small, quaint town of Whisper Cove, aspiring baker and current employee of three measly jobs—have agreed to play girlfriend to the very wealthy and eligible bachelor. 

The gig will bring me thousands of dollars closer to my dream of opening a bakery in my hometown. All I have to do is pretend to be madly in love with the man for one weekend …

Keyword: Pretend


Falling for your Fake Boyfriend is a dual POV cozy, sweet romance that has all the swoon and sizzle without the spice—Kisses only.



First rule of fake dating: Never fall in love …

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "This book is amazing and something I could share with my teenage daughters." -Rachel


~*~Excerpt~*~

“Isla, I’ve got a proposition for you.” I realized I’d worded it badly the second it left my mouth.

Some of the color disappeared from her smooth cheeks, and she stepped discreetly back.

“No, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean anything like that. Although, it does require you to do a little acting. How are you at that?”

Her smooth brows bunched as she tried to decide exactly what the apparent madman in front of her was asking. I was usually a much better communicator. I blamed it on the distraction of her incredible blue eyes and soft pink lips.

“Acting? Uh, well, my sisters and I used to put on plays. But if I’m being totally honest, I was better at set design than acting. My sister, Layla, is the thespian.”

“Well, this won’t take thespian-level talent. We just need to convince my family, mostly my mom, that we are a legitimate couple for a long weekend. My sister is getting married. I’ll pay you five thousand.”

“Five thousand? Dollars?” she asked with wide eyes.

“No, five thousand M&M’s. Of course, dollars.”

Her lips twisted in thought and then her expression turned far more serious. “What will be expected of me?”

I shook my head. “Nothing like that. I assure you my mother will see that you have your own guest room. You just need to be polite and smile a lot. Oh, and we’ll keep you away from candy dishes.”

“Very funny. So, I smile, act polite—”

“And pretend that you are madly in love with me.”

~*~

Falling for your Fake Boyfriend is a dual POV cozy, sweet romance that has all the swoon and sizzle without the spice—Kisses only.

TROPES: 
✅ Fake Dating
✅ 
Small Town
✅ 
Billionaire
✅ 
Closed Door - kissing only
✅ Opposites Attract

 

Chapter 1 Look Inside

Prologue:
“Remember, Isla, don’t worry about princes. They’re overrated. You will make your own happily ever after.” Those were my grandmother’s last words to me.

My grandmother, Maeve, or Nonna, as my sisters and I called her, once told me that everyone has a happily ever after waiting for them. “You just have to be ready for it, my bonny little one, or it might pass you right by,” she’d tell me as she brushed my long, blonde hair.

Nonna loved to tell us stories that were chock-full of magical lands, handsome princes, glistening castles and grumbly villains. She’d fill her hearth with bristly pinecones and fragrant chopped wood, signaling in her own sweet way that we were about to hear a story. My four sisters and I would run for the dark mahogany chest where she kept her handmade quilts. Fat cherubs smiled up at us from the top of the chest, seeming to laugh at us as we argued over who would get to use the kitten quilt. The fabric on the kitten quilt had been worn soft as velvet, and each colorful square had a fluffy, fat kitten in the middle of it. Aria was the oldest and had the longest reach, so she invariably snagged the kitten quilt. Occasionally, Layla, the youngest, would put up enough of a fuss that Aria would hand her the quilt and settle for her second favorite, a red-and-green calico Christmas quilt.

While the others fought over the kitten quilt, I always reached for the mod flower quilt. It was dotted with massive flowers, each a different color. Nonna sewed it as a sixteenth birthday present for our mom, and I loved it the most because if I pulled it close enough around me, I could still smell my mom’s sweet scent in the folds of the fabric.
Nonna would put on soft, haunting flute or fiddle music before settling herself into her favorite rocking chair, the one that squeaked every time she rocked forward. She’d complain about the pain in her bones as she put her knit shawl over her knees. But first, she’d place a chipped blue porcelain plate of her buttery shortbread in the center of the floor and, like we did with the kitten quilt, we’d all dive for the biggest piece. Treats in hand and wrapped in our wonderfully worn quilts, we’d settle around her on the floor, forming a half-circle of eager smiles and sparkling eyes as we waited for her glorious tale.

We’d listen raptly as if she was telling us all the secrets of the world with her lyrical Irish accent. Her rosy apple cheeks would round with laughter when the story was funny, and when the story got dark or scary, she’d growl or jump suddenly, and we’d shriek and scream and fall apart in bouts of laughter.

Aria, always needing to be the brave big sister, loved the stories where a heroine met her love match in a swashbuckling pirate or charismatic highwayman. She loved the heroes who wore worn black boots, leathery frock coats and crooked, cocky smiles. Aria would sit up straighter under the quilt whenever the thin line between hero and rogue was crossed.

Ella, the middle sister, was our family bookworm. She loved the stories that took us out onto a cold, foggy moor or into a dark, dank castle. The more mystery surrounding the leading man, the better. She loved the stories featuring a quiet, troubled, scarred hero, as long as he came with a dry sense of humor and … perhaps … an ivy-covered manor house.

Ava was a year older than Layla and loved to remind her little sister that she was much more mature. Ava’s sparkling green eyes always rounded during the adventurous tales, the ones that took the heroine to the far ends of the earth where she—naturally—crossed paths with a handsome fellow adventurer. Then the two sailed or hiked or floated in a big, striped hot air balloon into the fading sunset.

Layla loved any story with lots of animals and a tall, handsome hero on horseback. As the youngest of the bunch, she crinkled her nose and made faces when the couple kissed at the end, but the rest of us giggled with glee at the happy ending.

And then there was me, Isla, the second oldest. I loved the Cinderella-style stories, where the heroine worked hard, did all the right things and was eventually rewarded with a glorious happy ending.

Sometimes at night, I’d lay in the bed I shared with Aria and Layla, and I’d think about my prince, somewhere in the world, waiting to give me that fairy-tale ending Nonna had promised. Nonna would hear me tossing and turning, and she’d come up to kiss me goodnight and tuck me in again. I’d ask her if she was sure there was really a fairy-tale ending waiting for me. She’d lean over and kiss my forehead and say, “Aye, my little cookie crumble, your happily ever after will come soon enough.”

But little girls grow up, and the ups and downs of reality hit more often than one would like. And that’s when I realized that Nonna’s last words, telling me to make my own happy ending, were the most profound of all.

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