The Blind Date Landish, Lauren (read a book TXT) š
Book online Ā«The Blind Date Landish, Lauren (read a book TXT) šĀ». Author Landish, Lauren
The Blind Date
Lauren Landish
Edited by Valorie Clifton Edited by Staci Etheridge
Copyright Ā© 2021 by Lauren Landish
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Contents
Also by Lauren Landish
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Epilogue
Excerpt: Rough Love - Tannen Boys Book 1
About the Author
Also by Lauren Landish
Big Fat Fake Series:
My Big Fat Fake Wedding || My Big Fat Fake Engagement || My Big Fat Fake Honeymoon
Standalones:
Drop Dead Gorgeous || The Dare
Bennett Boys Ranch:
Buck Wild || Riding Hard || Racing Hearts
The Tannen Boys:
Rough Love || Rough Edge || Rough Country
Dirty Fairy Tales:
Beauty and the Billionaire || Not So Prince Charming || Happily Never After
Get Dirty:
Dirty Talk || Dirty Laundry || Dirty Deeds || Dirty Secrets
Chapter 1 Riley
āHey, Sunshiners!ā I say to my phone, holding it at armās length in my right hand while my left hand is under my chin, fingers out and wiggling in what I affectionately dubbed the āSunshine Saluteā. Itās my way of sending my followers some Rays of Sunshine, and I do it at the start of every video because who wouldnāt want a little extra brightness in their day?
āItās a beautiful day, isnāt it?ā I ask, doing a slow twirl to give everyone a quick view. Spring has sprung in Briar Rose, and the days of rain have made every flower bloom full and lush. The sun hits them to create a dazzling array of colors everywhere you look. āMother Nature is truly an artist, isnāt she? Makes me feel . . .ā
I pause dramatically, my smile lifting another inch before I look directly into the camera, āEverything. Because joy is right here in front of you, if only you take the time to see it. Whatās bringing you joy today? Tell me in the comments so we can enjoy it together.ā
I see a flower thatās fallen off its stem to the dirt below and focus my camera on the blooming plant and then the loose, wilting pink flower. Some people would only appreciate the larger plant, but I pick up the slightly crumpled flower, making sure to show my yellow-painted nails in the frame, and then place it behind my ear. I give one more smiling wave to the camera, tilting my head to highlight the bloom with sunlight. āIt doesnāt have to be perfect to be appreciated. Itās all good enough if it makes you smile. Youāre good enough to make others smile.ā
I give another wiggle and click off, still grinning widely as I double-check the video before posting it to my Instagram timeline. By the time I tuck my phone back into my bag, it will have already been shared across multiple platforms, gotten hundreds of likes, and have comments listing out what brings my followers joy today.
I love them. Not just the little hearts and compliments about my fresh manicure. I mean, I love all my followers, the people who let me lead the life I enjoy. Without them, I couldnāt get ad revenue from my daily videos and photos, and I couldnāt get companies to hire me for sponsored posts. So itās to their credit that Iām able to do what I do. But itās more than that too. They let me into their hearts, trusting that Iāll bring a bit of my special brand of Riley Sunshine to every day. Itās a responsibility I take seriously, not because itās my trademark but because itās who I truly am.
āAre you done yet?ā a faux-bored voice sighs out next to me. My eyes lift from the phone screen, and I stick my tongue out at my best friend, Arielle Daniels. She does it right back like weāre six instead of twenty-six.
āLadies, ladies . . .ā Eli Taylor, the third of our motley group of musketeers, scolds. He holds his hands out, one toward each of us as though weāre going to throw down. To be clear, weāre not. The only thing Arielle and I will fight over is the last garlic knot when we order pizza. Or the last egg roll. Or donut. Okay, food. Weāll fight over food, but who wouldnāt?
āI think we need to continue heading to our lunch date, post haste, before we have bigger problems.ā He leans toward me, talking behind his hand as though Arielle canāt hear him. āYou know how she gets when sheās hangry. I estimate ten minutes before she starts stealing ice cream from babies.ā He lifts his chin toward an adorable toddler with chocolate smeared across his face and a cringing mother standing by with a wet wipe.
I look from Eli to Arielle, whoās rolling her eyes. I answer with an eye roll of my own to be safe because I can see that Eli is right. Arielleās scanning the street like a hot dog cart might pop up out of nowhere. Luckily, our favorite burrito place, which was our destination to start with, is right ahead and undeniably safer for our bellies than dirty-water-soaked meat sticks. Or half-eaten, stolen ice cream.
āTen minutes? Iām leaning more toward seven-point-five, five if Miguel is cooking fresh carne asada.ā
Arielleās stomach growls loudly, and she slaps her palms over her belly as Eli and I laugh. āCome on,ā Eli says, leading the charge toward the best burritos in Briar Rose. Miguelās place doesnāt even have a name. Itās just a window in the side of a building with some picnic tables scattered outside. If you know itās there, youāre lucky. If not, well, youāre missing out.
We order and sit, claiming one end of a table for ourselves. We attract attention no matter what we do. Iām Riley Sunshineānot famous, exactly, but more well-known
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