- Home
- Barbara Cartland
- From Hell to Heaven 
From Hell to Heaven Read online
    AUTHOR’S NOTE
   A dead heat at the Derby Stakes begins this tale of love and hate, misery and happiness.
   There have actually been two dead heats at the ‘Blue Riband of the Turf’, the greatest horse race in the world.
   In 1828 the Duke of Rutland’s Cadland dead heated with The Colonel owned by the Hon. Edward Petre. Under the then rules of racing this dead heat was run off later in the afternoon and Cadland won.
   One of the most historic Derby’s ever run took place in 1884. At the spring meeting at Newmarket Prince Batthyany was in a high state of excitement as Galliard, a son of his much loved Galopin was expected to win the Two Thousand Guineas. However, the strain was too much for the Prince, who had a fatal heart attack as he entered the Jockey Club luncheon rooms.
   His death undoubtedly altered the course of Turf history, as the classic nominations of his colt St. Simon was thereby rendered void according to the rule that then existed. St. Simon proved to be the greatest racehorse he had ever owned and certainly the greatest sire ever known to the English Turf. There is no doubt that he would have won the 1884 Derby.
   In his absence the race resulted in a dead heat between Sir John Willoughby’s Harvester and Mr. John Hammond’s St, Gatien. The Stewards gave the owners the opportunity of having a run off or dividing the race and they unanimously decided to divide the prize money between them.
   CHAPTER ONE ~ 1831
   There had been a long wait, as was usual with a big field and then a number of false starts.
   The Marquis of Alchester, with his glasses trained on the horses in the far distance, gave an impatient sigh.
   “Feeling anxious, Linden?” Peregrine Wallingham asked.
   “No, merely confident,” the Marquis replied and his friend laughed.
   “That is exactly what Branscombe says.”
   The Marquis’s expression darkened.
   He was well aware that the Earl of Branscombe’s Gunpowder was a definite danger to his own, Highflyer, but, as he had just said, he was confident that his horse would be the winner.
   The huge crowd sprawling over the hill was as usual on Derby Day different from the crowd at any other Race Meeting.
   The Derby Stakes, which was the Blue Riband of the Turf, was a day to which all sportsmen looked forward and, although it was not an official holiday, there was hardly an employer in the country who did not expect his employees to absent themselves if they were anywhere within reach of Epsom.
   “They’re off!”
   The cry went up with a big shout as the flag was down and the horses began the long run that led them round Tattenham Corner and up the straight in front of the stands.
   This was a golden opportunity for pickpockets, for necks were craned and the attention of everybody was on the horses.
   In less than three minutes it would be all over and confirmation of the race result would be signalled by a flight of pigeons circling up over the stands and carrying the news of the winner to the newspapers and bookies in different parts of the country.
   There were roars from the crowd all along the course.
   In the stand of the Jockey Club, where the more affluent owners watched their own horses and those they had backed with a concentration that had no need for audible expression, there was silence.
   Peregrine Wallingham was aware that on this occasion there was an extra tension owing to the rivalry between the Earl of Branscombe and the Marquis of Alchester.
   They were old enemies and, because he was the Marquis’s oldest and closest friend, he disliked the Earl almost as much as his friend did.
   One reason was that the Earl of Branscombe considered himself not only the finest sportsman in the country but also of such importance that he conceded that only the King took precedence in front of him.
   Dukes, Marquises and other Earls he dismissed with a wave of his hand and asserted with some truth that his blood and his ancient title made him superior to them and that it was only due to some strange quirk of fate that he was not in fact a candidate for the Throne itself!
   What was so infuriating, especially for the Marquis, was the fact that there was justification for the Earl’s assertions and he was indeed outstanding and exceptionally fortunate in the Sporting World.
   Certainly his horses had in the last two years won many of the Classic races, but then so had those belonging to the Marquis.
   Both gentlemen were exceptional shots, outstanding amateur pugilists and could speak in the House of Lords so eloquently that their fellow Peers flocked into the Chamber to hear them, especially when they were opposing each other.
   But while the Marquis was popular with his contemporaries, the Earl was not. Although both habitually gave themselves airs, the Earl was, everybody decided behind his back, almost intolerable.
   Now the horses had rounded Tattenham Comer and were galloping at a good pace up the last stretch of the course.
   When there was a large field, it was difficult to see exactly which horse was ahead until they drew nearer.
   Then as the crowd began to chant the names it was easy to hear the cry of, ‘Gunpowder! Gunpowder!’ being drowned by the roaring of ‘Highflyer! Highflyer!’
   They drew nearer and Peregrine Wallingham murmured beneath his breath,
   “My God, it’s going to be a close finish!”
   He knew that the Marquis at his side was aware of it too, not from anything he said but because of a sudden rigidity about his long athletic body.
   Then on the other side of him Peregrine Wallingham heard the Earl mutter impatiently,
   “Come on, blast you!”
   Now the cries of the crowd grew louder and, as the horses drew nearer, Peregrine Wallingham realised that the two in the lead were riding literally neck and neck.
   It was completely impossible to guess which one would pass the Winning Post first.
   The jockeys had their whips raised, but there was really no need to use them. Both horses were aware that they had to beat the other and were striving with every muscle in their bodies to get ahead.
   Then, as they flashed past the Winning Post, there was a sudden sound that those familiar with racing knew was one of astonishment.
   For the second time in fifty years the Derby Stakes seemed to have finished in a dead heat.
   “Mine by a nose, I think!” the Earl trumpeted, aggressively taking his glasses from his eyes.
   The Marquis did not deign to answer. He merely turned and walked from the box followed by his friend, Peregrine Wallingham, and they hurried through the crowds to the gate where the horses, when they had been pulled in, would leave the course.
   “I have never seen anything so extraordinary!” Peregrine exclaimed when he could walk beside the Marquis.
   “I don’t believe that there was an inch between them!” the Marquis replied, “whatever Branscombe may pretend.”
   “You are right,” Peregrine agreed. “At the same time it’s a pity you could not have won. Branscombe has been boasting for the last month that his horse was a sure winner and I am certain in consequence he has shortened the odds.”
   The Marquis gave his friend a sharp glance.
   “You surely did not back Gunpowder?”
   “Of course not,” Peregrine replied. “I put my shirt on Highflyer, but unfortunately I had not much of it left!”
   The Marquis laughed.
   “You should stick to horses,” he said. “They are cheaper in the long run than Cyprians.”
   “I found that out a long time ago,” Peregrine agreed. “But that little dancer from Covent Garden has a magnet that makes the guineas fly out of my pocket quicker than I can put them in!”
   He spoke ruefully, but the Marquis was not listening.
   He was wa
tching his horse trotting back down the course and was aware that his jockey was having a violent altercation with the rider of the Earl’s Gunpowder.
   Only when the noise of the crowds cheering them from behind the rails made it impossible for them to hear each other could they concentrate on riding triumphantly through the lane cleared for them towards the Weighing-In room.
   As the horses entered the enclosure, the Marquis was waiting and, when his jockey dismounted, he said to him,
   “What happened, Bennett?”
   “Bumped and obstructed me ’e did when we was comin’ into the straight after roundin’ Tattenham Corner, my Lord. I ’d’ave beat ’im easy, but for that!”
   The Marquis was scowling.
   “Is this true?” he asked. “You are sure of what you are saying?”
   “’E were behavin’ as bad as be possible for a rider to be, my Lord, and that’s the truth.”
   “I believe you,” the Marquis said, “but I doubt if there is anything we can do about it. Get weighed in.”
   Carrying his saddle the jockey went towards the Weighing-In machine, which the Stewards were supervising and, as he reached it, the Earl’s jockey passed him with a grin on his face.
   As he did so, he said in a voice only he could hear,
   “Squeakin’ are you? Won’t do you no good!”
   Bennett had been warned by the Marquis in the past not to brawl or to enter into arguments in front of the Stewards.
   Right or wrong it always reflected on both of those concerned and, although Bennett pressed his lips together in what was almost a grimace, he said nothing.
   Only when he re-joined the Marquis did he say,
   “I’ll get that Jake Smith if it’s the last thing I does! ’E rides dirty and that’s why no one would employ ’im till ’is Lordship took ’im on.”
   The Marquis’s eyes narrowed.
   “Is that a fact?” he enquired.
   “’Tis well known, my Lord. Jake Smith were beggin’ for a ride till three months ago.”
   The Marquis did not speak for a moment. Then he congratulated his jockey, promised the usual reward which was a very generous one for riding the winner and re-joined Peregrine Wallingham.
   He told him what he had heard and Peregrine said,
   “I heard that Smith was a questionable jockey before he was taken on by Branscombe, but he has never ridden a horse that I would wish to back. I will find out what I can about him, Linden.”
   “Do that,” the Marquis agreed, “but now, I think, unless you particularly want to stay for the next race, we should be getting back to London. The crowds are going to make it an exhausting journey and the quicker we leave the course the better.”
   “I am ready to go,” Peregrine Wallingham replied.
   “What is more,” the Marquis went on, “I have no wish to return to the box and hear Branscombe averring, which he is sure to do, that he is in reality the winner.”
   “It has been officially declared a dead heat,” Peregrine said, “so you share the prize money of two thousand eight hundred pounds.”
   “That will not prevent him from saying I am not entitled to it,” the Marquis said grimly. “God, how I dislike that man!”
   Peregrine laughed.
   “That is obvious and I admit that his conceit and bumptiousness gets under everybody’s skin, except, of course, the Monarch’s.”
   The Marquis said nothing.
   He was only too well aware that the new King, William IV, had been beguiled by the Earl’s inflated estimation of his own abilities into believing him to be an exceptionally good advisor.
   The Earl had jumped at the chance and as a Courtier had said somewhat bitterly,
   “I have always found one Monarch enough, but when one has two of them, I find my position almost insupportable!”
   Trusting, good-natured and rather stupid, the King was anxious to make a good impression on his subjects and with the help of his dowdy and dull little German wife to have a very different Court from that of his brother, King George IV.
   He swept away the immorality and the raffishness of the Court, which had scandalised the country, but unfortunately the laughter had gone too, as those who attended the King at Windsor, Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle were sometimes dismayed to find.
   The Princess Lieven, wife of the Russian Ambassador, had complained to the Marquis that the Court was now intolerably dreary and dull.
   “There is no possibility of even having a reasonable conversation,” she said bitterly. “In the evening we all sit at a round table. The King snoozes whilst the Queen does needlework and talks with great animation, but with never a word of politics.”
   The Marquis had laughed.
   He knew the Princess who was vivacious, witty and usually very indiscreet, was undoubtedly suffering and he only hoped that the Earl of Branscombe was finding his self-appointed position a bore.
   Actually, when the Marquis was alone with the King, he found him, although inclined to be repetitive, quite interesting on subjects on which he was an authority.
   But he had in many ways to agree with the Duke of Wellington, who had said in his blunt manner,
   “Really my Master is too stupid! When at table he wishes to make a speech, I always turn to him my deaf ear so as not to be tempted to contradict him!”
   The Marquis began to move swiftly through the crowd of touts, gypsies, confidence men and beggars.
   There were dwarfs, clowns, acrobats, minstrels and tipsters, all of whom added to the hubbub of the occasion.
   As quickly as was possible, the Marquis found his phaeton and, as soon as he was driving his horses in the direction of London, Peregrine remarked,
   “I presume the King, who knows little about racing, will be pleased that Branscombe’s horse came in first, even if he is forced to share the honour and glory with you.”
   “Doubtless the King will believe that Branscombe would have won if Highflyer had not passed the Winning Post at the same moment by a sheer fluke!”
   The Marquis spoke bitterly and Peregrine was aware that the result rankled.
   Actually, he thought, it had been very exciting and certainly a surprise that few racegoers would have expected.
   Because he was genuinely fond of the Marquis he said consolingly,
   “Well, you and I, Linden, know that he only won by a foul, but it will not do any good to say so.”
   “No, of course not,” the Marquis agreed, “but I will do my best to see that damned jockey gets his deserts. I bet you any money you like that Branscombe knew what he was doing when he engaged the man.”
   “Of course he did!” Peregrine agreed. “He was determined to beat you by fair means or foul.”
   “That does not surprise me,” the Marquis said. “Branscombe has always been the same ever since he was at Eton. He has to be top and if you remember even there we were always running neck and neck for some position or other.”
   Peregrine laughed.
   The rivalry between the two boys had been the talk of the school and the other scholars had divided themselves equally behind one or the other. It had been very much the same when they had both gone to Oxford University.
   He himself had always disliked the Earl because he knew that, despite his success in the field of sport, he was fundamentally unsporting.
   He was not averse to taking an underhand advantage in any contest when he intended to be the winner.
   Some boys and young men sense with an almost clairvoyant perception the flaws in each other and Peregrine had always been quite sure that there was a canker somewhere in the Earl of which not many people were aware.
   The Marquis was different.
   Although he had his faults, he was in his friend’s mind a gentleman who would never do anything that was not completely straight and honourable.
   “What are you thinking about?” the Marquis enquired as they cleared the worst of the crowds and the horses were able to move more quickly.
   “You, as it happens.”
 />
   “I am flattered!” the Marquis said sarcastically. “But why?”
   “I was comparing you to Branscombe, to his disadvantage.”
   “So I should think and I am not looking forward to the dinner this evening.”
   The Derby Dinner given by the Stewards of the Jockey Club was always a spectacular occasion and every winner of the Derby enjoyed the congratulations and the honour that was accorded to him on that particular evening.
   It would be particularly irksome, as Peregrine knew, for the Marquis to have to pretend that he enjoyed the Earl’s company and to repress the knowledge that their horses had only been equal owing to foul riding by his jockey.
   “Let’s hope we need not stay long,” Peregrine said in an effort to cheer up his friend. “There are some very attractive little ‘pieces of muslin’ arrived from France at the Palace of Pleasure whom you may find interesting as soon as we can get away.”
   The Marquis did not reply. Peregrine remembered that his friend usually found such houses a waste of time and so he asked quickly,
   “But I expect you have arranged to meet Lady Isobel.”
   There was just a note of doubt in the question as if he realised that recently the Marquis had not been seen as often as might have been expected with Lady Isobel Sidley.
   This was surprising, for she was not only an acknowledged beauty in London Society but was also quite obviously wildly passionately in love with the Marquis to the point where the whole Social world knew all about it.
   Lady Isobel had, Peregrine had often thought, been born too late. Her impetuous indiscretions were such as had been admired fifteen years ago by the Prince Regent.
   He had loved pretty women and he had certainly not wished them to be moral or prudent.
   Unfortunately Lady Isobel had never learned to control her feelings and her infatuation for the Marquis, which she had made no attempt to disguise, had already shocked the Queen.
   There was a distinct pause.
   Then with his eyes on his horses the Marquis said,
   “No. I shall not be seeing Isobel. To tell you the truth, Peregrine, I am no longer interested.”
   His friend turned to stare at him incredulously.
   He had thought that perhaps the Marquis might remonstrate with Isobel or curtail some of the time they were seen together in public, but that he should have finished with her completely was incredible.
   

 195. Moon Over Eden
195. Moon Over Eden Paradise Found
Paradise Found A Victory for Love
A Victory for Love Lovers in Lisbon
Lovers in Lisbon Love Casts Out Fear
Love Casts Out Fear The Wicked Widow
The Wicked Widow The Angel and the Rake
The Angel and the Rake Sweet Enchantress
Sweet Enchantress The Race For Love
The Race For Love Born of Love
Born of Love Miracle For a Madonna
Miracle For a Madonna Love Joins the Clans
Love Joins the Clans Forced to Marry
Forced to Marry Love Strikes a Devil
Love Strikes a Devil The Love Light of Apollo
The Love Light of Apollo An Adventure of Love
An Adventure of Love Princes and Princesses: Favourite Royal Romances
Princes and Princesses: Favourite Royal Romances Terror in the Sun
Terror in the Sun The Fire of Love
The Fire of Love The Odious Duke
The Odious Duke The Eyes of Love
The Eyes of Love A Nightingale Sang
A Nightingale Sang The Wonderful Dream
The Wonderful Dream The Island of Love
The Island of Love The Protection of Love
The Protection of Love Beyond the Stars
Beyond the Stars Only a Dream
Only a Dream An Innocent in Russia
An Innocent in Russia The Duke Comes Home
The Duke Comes Home Love in the Moon
Love in the Moon Love and the Marquis
Love and the Marquis Love Me Forever
Love Me Forever Flowers For the God of Love
Flowers For the God of Love Love and the Cheetah
Love and the Cheetah A Battle for Love
A Battle for Love The Outrageous Lady
The Outrageous Lady Seek the Stars
Seek the Stars The Storms Of Love
The Storms Of Love Saved by love
Saved by love The Power and the Prince
The Power and the Prince The Irresistible Buck
The Irresistible Buck A Dream from the Night
A Dream from the Night In the Arms of Love
In the Arms of Love Good or Bad
Good or Bad Winged Victory
Winged Victory This is Love
This is Love Magic From the Heart
Magic From the Heart The Lioness and the Lily
The Lioness and the Lily The Sign of Love
The Sign of Love Warned by a Ghost
Warned by a Ghost Love Conquers War
Love Conquers War The Runaway Heart
The Runaway Heart The Hidden Evil
The Hidden Evil Just Fate
Just Fate The Passionate Princess
The Passionate Princess Imperial Splendour
Imperial Splendour Lucky in Love
Lucky in Love Haunted
Haunted For All Eternity
For All Eternity The Passion and the Flower
The Passion and the Flower The Enchanted Waltz
The Enchanted Waltz Temptation of a Teacher
Temptation of a Teacher Riding In the Sky
Riding In the Sky Moon Over Eden (Bantam Series No. 37)
Moon Over Eden (Bantam Series No. 37) Lucifer and the Angel
Lucifer and the Angel Love is Triumphant
Love is Triumphant The Magnificent Marquis
The Magnificent Marquis A Kiss for the King
A Kiss for the King A Duel With Destiny
A Duel With Destiny Beauty or Brains
Beauty or Brains A Shaft of Sunlight
A Shaft of Sunlight The Gates of Paradise
The Gates of Paradise Women have Hearts
Women have Hearts Two Hearts in Hungary
Two Hearts in Hungary A Kiss from the Heart
A Kiss from the Heart 108. An Archangel Called Ivan
108. An Archangel Called Ivan 71 Love Comes West
71 Love Comes West 103. She Wanted Love
103. She Wanted Love Love in the Clouds
Love in the Clouds 104. A Heart Finds Love
104. A Heart Finds Love 100. A Rose In Jeopardy
100. A Rose In Jeopardy Their Search for Real Love
Their Search for Real Love A Very Special Love
A Very Special Love A Royal Love Match
A Royal Love Match Love Drives In
Love Drives In In Love In Lucca
In Love In Lucca Never Forget Love
Never Forget Love The Mysterious Maid-Servant
The Mysterious Maid-Servant The Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15)
The Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15) Call of the Heart
Call of the Heart Love Under Fire
Love Under Fire The Pretty Horse-Breakers
The Pretty Horse-Breakers The Shadow of Sin (Bantam Series No. 19)
The Shadow of Sin (Bantam Series No. 19) The Devilish Deception
The Devilish Deception Castle of Love
Castle of Love Little Tongues of Fire
Little Tongues of Fire 105. an Angel In Hell
105. an Angel In Hell Learning to Love
Learning to Love An Introduction to the Pink Collection
An Introduction to the Pink Collection Gypsy Magic
Gypsy Magic A Princess Prays
A Princess Prays The Goddess and the Gaiety Girl
The Goddess and the Gaiety Girl Love Is the Reason For Living
Love Is the Reason For Living Love Forbidden
Love Forbidden The Importance of Love
The Importance of Love Mission to Monte Carlo
Mission to Monte Carlo Stars in the Sky
Stars in the Sky The House of Happiness
The House of Happiness An Innocent in Paris
An Innocent in Paris Revenge Is Sweet
Revenge Is Sweet Royalty Defeated by Love
Royalty Defeated by Love Love At Last
Love At Last Solita and the Spies
Solita and the Spies 73. A Tangled Web
73. A Tangled Web Riding to the Moon
Riding to the Moon An Unexpected Love
An Unexpected Love Say Yes Samantha
Say Yes Samantha An Angel Runs Away
An Angel Runs Away They Found their Way to Heaven
They Found their Way to Heaven The Richness of Love
The Richness of Love Love in the Highlands
Love in the Highlands Love In the East
Love In the East They Touched Heaven
They Touched Heaven Crowned by Music
Crowned by Music The Mountain of Love
The Mountain of Love The Heart of love
The Heart of love The Healing Hand
The Healing Hand The Ship of Love
The Ship of Love Love, Lords, and Lady-Birds
Love, Lords, and Lady-Birds It Is Love
It Is Love In Search of Love
In Search of Love The Trail to Love
The Trail to Love Love and Apollo
Love and Apollo To Heaven With Love
To Heaven With Love Never Laugh at Love
Never Laugh at Love The Punishment of a Vixen
The Punishment of a Vixen Love and the Loathsome Leopard
Love and the Loathsome Leopard The Revelation is Love
The Revelation is Love Double the Love
Double the Love Saved By A Saint
Saved By A Saint A Paradise On Earth
A Paradise On Earth Lucky Logan Finds Love
Lucky Logan Finds Love 65 A Heart Is Stolen
65 A Heart Is Stolen They Sought love
They Sought love The Husband Hunters
The Husband Hunters 160 Love Finds the Duke at Last
160 Love Finds the Duke at Last Kiss the Moonlight
Kiss the Moonlight The King Without a Heart
The King Without a Heart The Duke & the Preachers Daughter
The Duke & the Preachers Daughter The Golden Cage
The Golden Cage The Love Trap
The Love Trap Who Can Deny Love
Who Can Deny Love A Very Unusual Wife
A Very Unusual Wife A Teacher of Love
A Teacher of Love Search For a Wife
Search For a Wife Fire in the Blood
Fire in the Blood Seeking Love
Seeking Love The Keys of Love
The Keys of Love A Change of Hearts
A Change of Hearts Love in the Ruins
Love in the Ruins 68 The Magic of Love
68 The Magic of Love Secret Harbor
Secret Harbor A Lucky Star
A Lucky Star Pray For Love
Pray For Love 21 The Mysterious Maid-Servant (The Eternal Collection)
21 The Mysterious Maid-Servant (The Eternal Collection) Alone In Paris
Alone In Paris Punished with Love
Punished with Love Joined by Love
Joined by Love A Shooting Star
A Shooting Star As Eagles Fly
As Eagles Fly The Wings of Ecstacy
The Wings of Ecstacy The Chieftain Without a Heart
The Chieftain Without a Heart Hiding from Love
Hiding from Love A Royal Rebuke
A Royal Rebuke The Scots Never Forget
The Scots Never Forget A Flight To Heaven
A Flight To Heaven White Lilac
White Lilac A Heart of Stone
A Heart of Stone Crowned with Love
Crowned with Love Fragrant Flower
Fragrant Flower A Prisioner in Paris
A Prisioner in Paris A Perfect Way to Heaven
A Perfect Way to Heaven Diona and a Dalmatian
Diona and a Dalmatian 69 Love Leaves at Midnight
69 Love Leaves at Midnight Fascination in France
Fascination in France Bride to a Brigand
Bride to a Brigand Bride to the King
Bride to the King A Heart in Heaven
A Heart in Heaven Love, Lies and Marriage
Love, Lies and Marriage A Miracle of Love
A Miracle of Love Bewitched (Bantam Series No. 16)
Bewitched (Bantam Series No. 16) The White Witch
The White Witch A Golden Lie
A Golden Lie The Poor Governess
The Poor Governess The Ruthless Rake
The Ruthless Rake Hide and Seek for Love
Hide and Seek for Love Lovers in London
Lovers in London Ruled by Love
Ruled by Love Mine for Ever
Mine for Ever Theirs to Eternity
Theirs to Eternity The Blue Eyed Witch
The Blue Eyed Witch 203. Love Wins
203. Love Wins The Cross of Love
The Cross of Love The Ghost Who Fell in Love
The Ghost Who Fell in Love Love and Lucia
Love and Lucia 66 The Love Pirate
66 The Love Pirate The Marquis Who Hated Women (Bantam Series No. 62)
The Marquis Who Hated Women (Bantam Series No. 62) The Tree of Love
The Tree of Love A Night of Gaiety
A Night of Gaiety Danger in the Desert
Danger in the Desert The Devil in Love (Bantam Series No. 24)
The Devil in Love (Bantam Series No. 24) Money or Love
Money or Love A Steeplechase For Love
A Steeplechase For Love In Hiding
In Hiding Sword to the Heart (Bantam Series No. 13)
Sword to the Heart (Bantam Series No. 13) 74. Love Lifts The Curse
74. Love Lifts The Curse The Proud Princess
The Proud Princess 72. The Impetuous Duchess
72. The Impetuous Duchess The Waters of Love
The Waters of Love This Way to Heaven
This Way to Heaven The Goddess Of Love
The Goddess Of Love Gift Of the Gods
Gift Of the Gods 60 The Duchess Disappeared
60 The Duchess Disappeared A Dangerous Disguise
A Dangerous Disguise Love at the Tower
Love at the Tower The Star of Love
The Star of Love Signpost To Love
Signpost To Love Secret Love
Secret Love Revenge of the Heart
Revenge of the Heart Love Rescues Rosanna
Love Rescues Rosanna Follow Your Heart
Follow Your Heart A Revolution Of Love
A Revolution Of Love The Dare-Devil Duke
The Dare-Devil Duke A Heaven on Earth
A Heaven on Earth Rivals for Love
Rivals for Love The Glittering Lights (Bantam Series No. 12)
The Glittering Lights (Bantam Series No. 12) 70 A Witch's Spell
70 A Witch's Spell The Queen Wins
The Queen Wins Love Finds the Way
Love Finds the Way Wish for Love
Wish for Love The Temptation of Torilla
The Temptation of Torilla The Devil Defeated
The Devil Defeated The Dream and the Glory
The Dream and the Glory Journey to love
Journey to love Too Precious to Lose
Too Precious to Lose Kiss from a Stranger
Kiss from a Stranger A Duke in Danger
A Duke in Danger Love Wins In Berlin
Love Wins In Berlin The Wild Cry of Love
The Wild Cry of Love A Battle of Brains
A Battle of Brains A Castle of Dreams
A Castle of Dreams The Unwanted Wedding
The Unwanted Wedding 64 The Castle Made for Love
64 The Castle Made for Love 202. Love in the Dark
202. Love in the Dark Love Is Dangerous
Love Is Dangerous 107. Soft, Sweet & Gentle
107. Soft, Sweet & Gentle A Kiss In the Desert
A Kiss In the Desert A Virgin Bride
A Virgin Bride The Disgraceful Duke
The Disgraceful Duke Look Listen and Love
Look Listen and Love A Hazard of Hearts
A Hazard of Hearts 104. the Glittering Lights
104. the Glittering Lights A Marriage Made In Heaven
A Marriage Made In Heaven Rescued by Love
Rescued by Love Love Came From Heaven
Love Came From Heaven Journey to Happiness
Journey to Happiness 106. Love's Dream in Peril
106. Love's Dream in Peril The Castle of Love
The Castle of Love Touching the Stars
Touching the Stars 169. A Cheiftain finds Love (The Eternal Collection)
169. A Cheiftain finds Love (The Eternal Collection) 171. The Marquis Wins (The Eternal Collection)
171. The Marquis Wins (The Eternal Collection) Sailing to Love
Sailing to Love The Unbreakable Spell
The Unbreakable Spell The Cruel Count (Bantam Series No. 28)
The Cruel Count (Bantam Series No. 28) The Secret of the Glen
The Secret of the Glen Danger to the Duke
Danger to the Duke The Peril and the Prince
The Peril and the Prince The Duke Is Deceived
The Duke Is Deceived A Road to Romance
A Road to Romance A King In Love
A King In Love Love and the Clans
Love and the Clans Love and the Gods
Love and the Gods The Incredible Honeymoon (Bantam Series No. 46)
The Incredible Honeymoon (Bantam Series No. 46) Pure and Untouched
Pure and Untouched Wanted a Royal Wife
Wanted a Royal Wife The Castle
The Castle 63 Ola and the Sea Wolf
63 Ola and the Sea Wolf Count the Stars
Count the Stars The Winning Post Is Love
The Winning Post Is Love Dancing on a Rainbow
Dancing on a Rainbow Love by the Lake
Love by the Lake From Hell to Heaven
From Hell to Heaven The Triumph of Love
The Triumph of Love