Temptation of a Teacher Read online




  Author’s Note

  When I visited France in June 1983, I motored with my son to the mountainous fertile Dordogne. Passing along a narrow roadway I saw a magnificent Medieval Château, rising above a small river, very ancient but obviously still inhabited.

  We drove closer and found behind it that there was a small attractive village with a lovely twelfth century Church exactly as I have described in this story.

  That night we stayed in a very old Château, which had been converted into a hotel. My circular bedroom was in the tower.

  It had a beamed ceiling and small windows in a three-foot-thick wall from which there was a panoramic view of the countryside.

  Beneath me I was sure that there were dark haunted dungeons!

  This story was born before I fell asleep.

  Arletta was the name of William the Conqueror’s mother, who came from Normandy, and his grandfather, Duke Rollo, had three sons who became Kings of England.

  The Granvilles, who are one of the oldest and most famous families in England, can trace their ancestry directly back to Duke Rollo.

  Chapter One ~ 1886

  “I am sorry, Lady Arletta. I am afraid it gives you very little time.”

  “Very little, Mr. Metcalfe.”

  Lady Arletta Cherrington-Weir gave a deep sigh and her blue eyes were wistful.

  Mr. Metcalfe, a precise middle-aged Solicitor, thought that, if it was in his power, he would do anything to sweep away the worried look on her young beautiful face.

  He had known Lady Arletta since she was an infant in a perambulator and had watched her grow up, becoming in doing so lovelier year by year.

  He thought now that it was impossible for any young woman of twenty to be more enchanting and so completely unselfconscious and unaware of her own attractions.

  This, however, was not surprising considering that for the past two years Lady Arletta had been obliged to nurse her father, the Earl of Weir, who had grown month by month increasingly querulous and disagreeable.

  He had refused to have anybody else attend to him and treated his daughter, as the doctors and everybody else thought, as he would not have dared to treat a professional nurse.

  But nurses were exceedingly difficult to find and in the quiet Counties of England, and especially in the villages, there were no nursing facilities except for the village midwife, who was usually old and fat and reputed to keep herself awake by imbibing large tots of gin through the dark hours of the night.

  Arletta therefore had been obliged to nurse her father, who was suffering not only from heart attacks, which gave him excruciating pain, but also from gout, which was entirely due to the large amount of claret and port he insisted on drinking despite the many protests of his physicians.

  “If I have to die,” he would say angrily, “I may as well have the comfort of feeling drunk and I am damned if I will have the only solace for my disgusting condition taken away from me.”

  Arletta had long ago given up arguing with him. She merely agreed with everything he said and he then swore at her for being dull and spiritless.

  Actually in his better moods he was exceedingly fond of his only child, although it was a bitter disappointment to him that there was no son to inherit the Earldom.

  It would therefore pass to his nephew, whom inevitably he disliked.

  Arletta did not like Hugo either thinking him a conceited young man who had his own ideas as to how he would run the estate and refused to listen to anything his uncle or she could tell him about it.

  Now, two weeks after her father’s death, Arletta had been told that her cousin intended to move at once into Weir House and she was to remove herself and her belongings as quickly as possible.

  The trouble was, as she had informed Mr. Metcalfe, she did not know where to go.

  “You must have some relative you could stay with, my Lady,” he queried, “and, of course, if you wish, you can always live in the Dower House.”

  “I know that,” Arletta replied, “and it is very kind of Cousin Hugo to offer it to me. But you know as well as I do, Mr. Metcalfe, that I would not be allowed to live there alone.”

  She sighed before she went on.

  “And I don’t think I could bear to see my cousin turn the whole estate upside down and manage it in quite a different way from Papa’s methods.”

  “I am sure you would be wise to go elsewhere,” Mr. Metcalfe advised her quietly, “but, because of your father’s illness, you were not presented at Court, as you should have been a year ago and you never had the ball, which I know you were looking forward to long before you left the schoolroom.”

  Arletta smiled.

  “I always imagined my ball at Weir House would be a particularly splendid one. Mama used to talk about it when I was quite small and say that it would be the best that the County had ever seen and just like the times when my grandfather was alive.”

  Mr. Metcalfe was well aware that it was the third Earl who had dissipated the Weir fortune with unbridled extravagance that and plunged the estate heavily into debt.

  The late Earl had done his best to develop the land, make the farms pay and ensure that they lived within their means.

  But he could not bring back into the family exchequer the revenue from the streets and squares of London that had been sold for what now seemed a pittance and the money that had been squandered by speculating in ‘get-rich-quick’ schemes that never materialised.

  When her father had fallen seriously ill just at the time when Arletta was emerging from the schoolroom, all ideas of entertainment had been set on one side.

  As he was extremely disagreeable to those who called to commiserate with him, he and his daughter became more and more isolated in the great house, which seemed unnaturally quiet after years of being filled with guests and a great deal of activity.

  Since the Earl could no longer ride, the foxhounds had been taken over by another landowner in the County, the fête, which was one of the great local events of the summer, was held elsewhere and the archery competition no longer took place on their long green lawns.

  The whole estate then seemed to be enveloped in a fog of depression and anticipation as to how long the Earl would live.

  It was, in point of fact, due to his daughter’s care that he had lived longer than expected, but now the end had come and Mr. Metcalfe thought optimistically that it might be a new beginning for Lady Arletta.

  “Now, let’s think this over sensibly,” he said in a business-like voice. “I know all your relatives and I hope you will not think it impertinent of me if I suggest who I think would look after you best and make you happy.”

  “Of course, dear Mr. Metcalfe, I would be most grateful for any suggestions you can make,” Arletta replied. “The trouble is, as you well know, I have very few close relatives living in England.”

  The Earl’s youngest brother, who was actually very much younger than the Earl, was Governor of Khartoum in Sudan and, as he was unmarried, it was not likely that he would want his niece to stay with him in such an isolated and troubled part of the world for any length of time.

  Her only aunt, on the other hand, was married to the Governor of the North-West Provinces in India.

  As she already had three daughters of her own and found them a problem, Mr. Metcalfe was certain that she would have no wish to have Lady Arletta added to her responsibilities.

  There was then a long pause before he said,

  “There is, my Lady, your cousin Emily.”

  Arletta gave a little cry of horror.

  “I will not live with Cousin Emily, Mr. Metcalfe! That would be too unkind. You know how she is given to good works and she disapproves of everything such as dancing and singing even if
people are happy. I cannot think of anything more depressing than having to live with Cousin Emily!”

  Mr. Metcalfe laughed.

  “I agree with you, Lady Arletta, so we must think of someone else.”

  “But who?”

  Arletta gave a little sigh before she added,

  “I have often wished that I knew some of my grandmother’s relatives, but, because they were French, they never seemed to come to England and, although I was named after my grandmother, I have never been to France.”

  “That is something I had forgotten,” Mr. Metcalfe murmured. “Of course ‘Arletta’ is a French name.”

  “I have always been told that it was the name of William the Conqueror’s mother,” Arletta said, “and, because Grandmama came from Normandy, she had fair hair and blue eyes. So although I look English, I also look French.”

  Mr. Metcalfe laughed.

  “I am prepared to believe you, Lady Arletta, although I always think of Frenchwomen as having dark eyes and dark hair.”

  “Not if they are Normans!” Arletta countered proudly.

  Then she went on,

  “Unless I am to write to Grandmama’s relatives whom I have never seen, who is there in England?”

  “There is Lady Travers,” Mr. Metcalfe suggested.

  Arletta made a little grimace.

  Lady Travers was a cousin who in the past had occasionally visited Weir House, but only when she invited herself.

  She was the type of middle-aged woman who was always suffering from some strange and unknown complaint that puzzled the doctors. Arletta had decided a long time ago that the only thing that was wrong with her cousin Alice was that she had not enough to do in her life.

  She had enough money to live in great comfort, but she had no children and she therefore concentrated entirely on herself and her ailments.

  She would spend months in Harrogate and then Cheltenham, until, finding that she was no better in either of these places, she would move on to Bath or just occasionally to some Continental Spa like Baden-Baden or Aix-les-Bains.

  Arletta thought that, after two years of coping with one invalid in the shape of her father, it would be utter misery to start all over again with another.

  Mr. Metcalfe watching her face knew just what she was thinking.

  “Definitely not Lady Travers,” he said firmly. “I am trying to remember who else there is.”

  “That is what I was doing too before you arrived,” Arletta admitted, “but I find it hard to believe that in such a distinguished family as ours there are so few of us left.”

  “There must be somebody,” Mr. Metcalfe surmised desperately.

  “I have some relatives who live in the very North of Scotland,” Arletta answered, “and I believe there is a distant branch of the family in Ireland, but I cannot imagine that they would be very pleased to see me after Papa has ignored them for so long.”

  As this was palpably true, Mr. Metcalfe did not even trouble to agree with her.

  He merely sat doodling on the block in front of him and seeing in his mind’s eye the impressive Family Tree that hung in the passage near the library.

  Arletta suddenly jumped up from her chair.

  “It’s no use worrying at the moment,” she declared. “I will move my things into the Dower House until I can think of somewhere where I can go.”

  “You ought to be in London, my Lady,” Mr. Metcalfe said. “After all the Season has only just begun and there must be somebody, even though you are in mourning, who would see that you met young people of your own age.”

  “You say I am in mourning,” Arletta replied, “but you will remember that in Papa’s will he said expressly that nobody was to wear black, nobody was to mourn for him and the sooner he was dead the better he would be pleased!”

  Mr. Metcalfe, who had drawn up the will himself and thought that it was just the sort of thing that the Earl would say, did not reply.

  At the time it had seemed rather bad taste and he felt now that spoken in Arletta’s soft musical voice it sounded almost cruel.

  “No one could have worked harder than you, my Lady,” he said quietly, “to make your father happy in the last year of his life and I am well aware of what a difficult patient he was.”

  “Terrible,” Arletta agreed.

  Quite unexpectedly she laughed before she went on.

  “The doctors could do nothing with him and neither could I. I think the only pleasure he had when he was in such pain was to defy us and do exactly the opposite of what was required of him.”

  “I am afraid that the late Earl was always a rebel,” Mr. Metcalfe sighed.

  “And I hope I am one too,” Arletta remarked.

  Mr. Metcalfe looked at her in surprise and she explained.

  “I do not intend to be crushed by what has happened to me and I mean somehow, now that I am free, to begin to live.”

  She did not have to explain to Mr. Metcalfe that, looking after her father in the large, empty dismal house with nobody to talk to, had been to all intents and purposes a living death for a young girl.

  “You are quite right,” he said aloud, “and somehow in some way you have to enjoy yourself. The first thing I think you should do is to buy yourself some new clothes. My wife always claims that there is nothing like a new gown to cheer herself up.”

  Lady Arletta gave a spontaneous little laugh that was very attractive.

  “I am sure that Mrs. Metcalfe is right,” she said, “and that is exactly what I will do. I will go up to London as soon as I have sorted matters out here and, however reprehensible it may seem, I shall buy myself some pretty gowns and, because I know that it would please Papa, they will not be black!”

  Mr. Metcalfe picked up his papers that were on the table and put them into a leather bag.

  “I think, my Lady,” he said, “that is the only sensible thing we have decided upon this afternoon. I promise you I shall think over your problem very carefully and hope eventually to come up with some sort of solution.”

  He spoke with confidence.

  At the same time at the back of his mind he knew that there was really no one who was congenial, understanding and kind in her family who this lovely young girl could appeal to for shelter.

  When he said ‘goodbye’ and Arletta walked with him down the long passages that led to the hall, he thought that the whole house looked dismal and overwhelming and the sooner Lady Arletta was away from it the better.

  She had taken on responsibilities this last year that would have seemed heavy and arduous even to a young man and, because he was very fond of her, Mr. Metcalfe wanted desperately to find some magical means by which she could be happy in the future.

  ‘There has to be a way,’ he ruminated as he drove away in his ancient pony cart drawn, however, by a young horse, which would make short work of the five miles that lay between Weir House and the small town where he lived and had his office.

  When he had gone and Arletta saw him disappearing under the branches of the great oak trees that lined the drive, she walked back into the hall.

  She was thinking, as Mr. Metcalfe had done, that the house seemed dismal and even the sunlight could not percolate through the windows to light up the portraits of the many Weir ancestors on the walls.

  They needed cleaning and the stair carpet, which was almost threadbare, should have been replaced years ago.

  She was well aware that the new Earl would find it all depressing and out of date.

  She was quite sure that Cousin Hugo would have very strong ideas of how he could improve the house and had always thought ridiculous the sacrifices that his predecessor had made to restore what had been thrown away in the past.

  “A few debts never hurt anyone!” Arletta had heard him say once.

  She was sure that he had meant it as a joke.

  At the same time she was certain that he did not have her father’s strict principles that had made him determined that he would never be in debt even for the smalles
t amount.

  He had also sworn to make good any deficits that his father had left outstanding.

  She was intelligent enough to realise that this was the reaction of a man who ever since he was a small boy had known that his father was spending more than he owned and that many people and small firms suffered in consequence.

  And yet now it was hard to think that the ‘bad old days’ might return and she felt that she could not bear after so much pinching and saving to see her cousin Hugo being a spendthrift like her grandfather.

  ‘I must go away,’ she told herself firmly.

  Slowly she walked back through the hall, where there were no servants, into the room where she had been sitting with Mr. Metcalfe.

  It was a very pretty room because, as it faced South, there always seemed to be more sunshine in it than anywhere else and her mother had made it particularly her own.

  She had accumulated in it all the furniture that was light, pretty and mostly French and pictures that were quite the opposite of the heavy portraits of the Weirs.

  Winter or summer there were always flowers to fill the air with fragrance and make vivid patches of colour against the pale green panelling that had been installed in the reign of Queen Anne.

  ‘I shall miss this room,’ Arletta thought to herself.

  Instinctively, as if she felt that she would understand, she lifted her eyes to the portrait of her mother that hung over the mantelpiece.

  It was a very lovely picture of a very lovely women.

  Looking at it, Arletta felt that the smile on her mother’s lips and the light in her eyes expressed not only her character and her personality but also her French blood, which made her so different from the Weirs, who could trace their ancestry back to Saxon times.

  It seemed strange that her grandfather should have married a Frenchwoman and yet at the same time Arletta could understand that he was a rebel like her father.

  His revolt had obviously been against the pomposity of his relations and perhaps too against the heavy atmosphere and gloom of the family house.

  ‘I wish I had known my grandmother,’ Arletta had often reflected.

  Her mother had said to her,

 

    195. Moon Over Eden Read online195. Moon Over EdenParadise Found Read onlineParadise FoundA Victory for Love Read onlineA Victory for LoveLovers in Lisbon Read onlineLovers in LisbonLove Casts Out Fear Read onlineLove Casts Out FearThe Wicked Widow Read onlineThe Wicked WidowThe Angel and the Rake Read onlineThe Angel and the RakeSweet Enchantress Read onlineSweet EnchantressThe Race For Love Read onlineThe Race For LoveBorn of Love Read onlineBorn of LoveMiracle For a Madonna Read onlineMiracle For a MadonnaLove Joins the Clans Read onlineLove Joins the ClansForced to Marry Read onlineForced to MarryLove Strikes a Devil Read onlineLove Strikes a DevilThe Love Light of Apollo Read onlineThe Love Light of ApolloAn Adventure of Love Read onlineAn Adventure of LovePrinces and Princesses: Favourite Royal Romances Read onlinePrinces and Princesses: Favourite Royal RomancesTerror in the Sun Read onlineTerror in the SunThe Fire of Love Read onlineThe Fire of LoveThe Odious Duke Read onlineThe Odious DukeThe Eyes of Love Read onlineThe Eyes of LoveA Nightingale Sang Read onlineA Nightingale SangThe Wonderful Dream Read onlineThe Wonderful DreamThe Island of Love Read onlineThe Island of LoveThe Protection of Love Read onlineThe Protection of LoveBeyond the Stars Read onlineBeyond the StarsOnly a Dream Read onlineOnly a DreamAn Innocent in Russia Read onlineAn Innocent in RussiaThe Duke Comes Home Read onlineThe Duke Comes HomeLove in the Moon Read onlineLove in the MoonLove and the Marquis Read onlineLove and the MarquisLove Me Forever Read onlineLove Me ForeverFlowers For the God of Love Read onlineFlowers For the God of LoveLove and the Cheetah Read onlineLove and the CheetahA Battle for Love Read onlineA Battle for LoveThe Outrageous Lady Read onlineThe Outrageous LadySeek the Stars Read onlineSeek the StarsThe Storms Of Love Read onlineThe Storms Of LoveSaved by love Read onlineSaved by loveThe Power and the Prince Read onlineThe Power and the PrinceThe Irresistible Buck Read onlineThe Irresistible BuckA Dream from the Night Read onlineA Dream from the NightIn the Arms of Love Read onlineIn the Arms of LoveGood or Bad Read onlineGood or BadWinged Victory Read onlineWinged VictoryThis is Love Read onlineThis is LoveMagic From the Heart Read onlineMagic From the HeartThe Lioness and the Lily Read onlineThe Lioness and the LilyThe Sign of Love Read onlineThe Sign of LoveWarned by a Ghost Read onlineWarned by a GhostLove Conquers War Read onlineLove Conquers WarThe Runaway Heart Read onlineThe Runaway HeartThe Hidden Evil Read onlineThe Hidden EvilJust Fate Read onlineJust FateThe Passionate Princess Read onlineThe Passionate PrincessImperial Splendour Read onlineImperial SplendourLucky in Love Read onlineLucky in LoveHaunted Read onlineHauntedFor All Eternity Read onlineFor All EternityThe Passion and the Flower Read onlineThe Passion and the FlowerThe Enchanted Waltz Read onlineThe Enchanted WaltzTemptation of a Teacher Read onlineTemptation of a TeacherRiding In the Sky Read onlineRiding In the SkyMoon Over Eden (Bantam Series No. 37) Read onlineMoon Over Eden (Bantam Series No. 37)Lucifer and the Angel Read onlineLucifer and the AngelLove is Triumphant Read onlineLove is TriumphantThe Magnificent Marquis Read onlineThe Magnificent MarquisA Kiss for the King Read onlineA Kiss for the KingA Duel With Destiny Read onlineA Duel With DestinyBeauty or Brains Read onlineBeauty or BrainsA Shaft of Sunlight Read onlineA Shaft of SunlightThe Gates of Paradise Read onlineThe Gates of ParadiseWomen have Hearts Read onlineWomen have HeartsTwo Hearts in Hungary Read onlineTwo Hearts in HungaryA Kiss from the Heart Read onlineA Kiss from the Heart108. An Archangel Called Ivan Read online108. An Archangel Called Ivan71 Love Comes West Read online71 Love Comes West103. She Wanted Love Read online103. She Wanted LoveLove in the Clouds Read onlineLove in the Clouds104. A Heart Finds Love Read online104. A Heart Finds Love100. A Rose In Jeopardy Read online100. A Rose In JeopardyTheir Search for Real Love Read onlineTheir Search for Real LoveA Very Special Love Read onlineA Very Special LoveA Royal Love Match Read onlineA Royal Love MatchLove Drives In Read onlineLove Drives InIn Love In Lucca Read onlineIn Love In LuccaNever Forget Love Read onlineNever Forget LoveThe Mysterious Maid-Servant Read onlineThe Mysterious Maid-ServantThe Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15) Read onlineThe Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15)Call of the Heart Read onlineCall of the HeartLove Under Fire Read onlineLove Under FireThe Pretty Horse-Breakers Read onlineThe Pretty Horse-BreakersThe Shadow of Sin (Bantam Series No. 19) Read onlineThe Shadow of Sin (Bantam Series No. 19)The Devilish Deception Read onlineThe Devilish DeceptionCastle of Love Read onlineCastle of LoveLittle Tongues of Fire Read onlineLittle Tongues of Fire105. an Angel In Hell Read online105. an Angel In HellLearning to Love Read onlineLearning to LoveAn Introduction to the Pink Collection Read onlineAn Introduction to the Pink CollectionGypsy Magic Read onlineGypsy MagicA Princess Prays Read onlineA Princess PraysThe Goddess and the Gaiety Girl Read onlineThe Goddess and the Gaiety GirlLove Is the Reason For Living Read onlineLove Is the Reason For LivingLove Forbidden Read onlineLove ForbiddenThe Importance of Love Read onlineThe Importance of LoveMission to Monte Carlo Read onlineMission to Monte CarloStars in the Sky Read onlineStars in the SkyThe House of Happiness Read onlineThe House of HappinessAn Innocent in Paris Read onlineAn Innocent in ParisRevenge Is Sweet Read onlineRevenge Is SweetRoyalty Defeated by Love Read onlineRoyalty Defeated by LoveLove At Last Read onlineLove At LastSolita and the Spies Read onlineSolita and the Spies73. A Tangled Web Read online73. A Tangled WebRiding to the Moon Read onlineRiding to the MoonAn Unexpected Love Read onlineAn Unexpected LoveSay Yes Samantha Read onlineSay Yes SamanthaAn Angel Runs Away Read onlineAn Angel Runs AwayThey Found their Way to Heaven Read onlineThey Found their Way to HeavenThe Richness of Love Read onlineThe Richness of LoveLove in the Highlands Read onlineLove in the HighlandsLove In the East Read onlineLove In the EastThey Touched Heaven Read onlineThey Touched HeavenCrowned by Music Read onlineCrowned by MusicThe Mountain of Love Read onlineThe Mountain of LoveThe Heart of love Read onlineThe Heart of loveThe Healing Hand Read onlineThe Healing HandThe Ship of Love Read onlineThe Ship of LoveLove, Lords, and Lady-Birds Read onlineLove, Lords, and Lady-BirdsIt Is Love Read onlineIt Is LoveIn Search of Love Read onlineIn Search of LoveThe Trail to Love Read onlineThe Trail to LoveLove and Apollo Read onlineLove and ApolloTo Heaven With Love Read onlineTo Heaven With LoveNever Laugh at Love Read onlineNever Laugh at LoveThe Punishment of a Vixen Read onlineThe Punishment of a VixenLove and the Loathsome Leopard Read onlineLove and the Loathsome LeopardThe Revelation is Love Read onlineThe Revelation is LoveDouble the Love Read onlineDouble the LoveSaved By A Saint Read onlineSaved By A SaintA Paradise On Earth Read onlineA Paradise On EarthLucky Logan Finds Love Read onlineLucky Logan Finds Love65 A Heart Is Stolen Read online65 A Heart Is StolenThey Sought love Read onlineThey Sought loveThe Husband Hunters Read onlineThe Husband Hunters160 Love Finds the Duke at Last Read online160 Love Finds the Duke at LastKiss the Moonlight Read onlineKiss the MoonlightThe King Without a Heart Read onlineThe King Without a HeartThe Duke & the Preachers Daughter Read onlineThe Duke & the Preachers DaughterThe Golden Cage Read onlineThe Golden CageThe Love Trap Read onlineThe Love TrapWho Can Deny Love Read onlineWho Can Deny LoveA Very Unusual Wife Read onlineA Very Unusual WifeA Teacher of Love Read onlineA Teacher of LoveSearch For a Wife Read onlineSearch For a WifeFire in the Blood Read onlineFire in the BloodSeeking Love Read onlineSeeking LoveThe Keys of Love Read onlineThe Keys of LoveA Change of Hearts Read onlineA Change of HeartsLove in the Ruins Read onlineLove in the Ruins68 The Magic of Love Read online68 The Magic of LoveSecret Harbor Read onlineSecret HarborA Lucky Star Read onlineA Lucky StarPray For Love Read onlinePray For Love21 The Mysterious Maid-Servant (The Eternal Collection) Read online21 The Mysterious Maid-Servant (The Eternal Collection)Alone In Paris Read onlineAlone In ParisPunished with Love Read onlinePunished with LoveJoined by Love Read onlineJoined by LoveA Shooting Star Read onlineA Shooting StarAs Eagles Fly Read onlineAs Eagles FlyThe Wings of Ecstacy Read onlineThe Wings of EcstacyThe Chieftain Without a Heart Read onlineThe Chieftain Without a HeartHiding from Love Read onlineHiding from LoveA Royal Rebuke Read onlineA Royal RebukeThe Scots Never Forget Read onlineThe Scots Never ForgetA Flight To Heaven Read onlineA Flight To HeavenWhite Lilac Read onlineWhite LilacA Heart of Stone Read onlineA Heart of StoneCrowned with Love Read onlineCrowned with LoveFragrant Flower Read onlineFragrant FlowerA Prisioner in Paris Read onlineA Prisioner in ParisA Perfect Way to Heaven Read onlineA Perfect Way to HeavenDiona and a Dalmatian Read onlineDiona and a Dalmatian69 Love Leaves at Midnight Read online69 Love Leaves at MidnightFascination in France Read onlineFascination in FranceBride to a Brigand Read onlineBride to a BrigandBride to the King Read onlineBride to the KingA Heart in Heaven Read onlineA Heart in HeavenLove, Lies and Marriage Read onlineLove, Lies and MarriageA Miracle of Love Read onlineA Miracle of LoveBewitched (Bantam Series No. 16) Read onlineBewitched (Bantam Series No. 16)The White Witch Read onlineThe White WitchA Golden Lie Read onlineA Golden LieThe Poor Governess Read onlineThe Poor GovernessThe Ruthless Rake Read onlineThe Ruthless RakeHide and Seek for Love Read onlineHide and Seek for LoveLovers in London Read onlineLovers in LondonRuled by Love Read onlineRuled by LoveMine for Ever Read onlineMine for EverTheirs to Eternity Read onlineTheirs to EternityThe Blue Eyed Witch Read onlineThe Blue Eyed Witch203. Love Wins Read online203. Love WinsThe Cross of Love Read onlineThe Cross of LoveThe Ghost Who Fell in Love Read onlineThe Ghost Who Fell in LoveLove and Lucia Read onlineLove and Lucia66 The Love Pirate Read online66 The Love PirateThe Marquis Who Hated Women (Bantam Series No. 62) Read onlineThe Marquis Who Hated Women (Bantam Series No. 62)The Tree of Love Read onlineThe Tree of LoveA Night of Gaiety Read onlineA Night of GaietyDanger in the Desert Read onlineDanger in the DesertThe Devil in Love (Bantam Series No. 24) Read onlineThe Devil in Love (Bantam Series No. 24)Money or Love Read onlineMoney or LoveA Steeplechase For Love Read onlineA Steeplechase For LoveIn Hiding Read onlineIn HidingSword to the Heart (Bantam Series No. 13) Read onlineSword to the Heart (Bantam Series No. 13)74. Love Lifts The Curse Read online74. Love Lifts The CurseThe Proud Princess Read onlineThe Proud Princess72. The Impetuous Duchess Read online72. The Impetuous DuchessThe Waters of Love Read onlineThe Waters of LoveThis Way to Heaven Read onlineThis Way to HeavenThe Goddess Of Love Read onlineThe Goddess Of LoveGift Of the Gods Read onlineGift Of the Gods60 The Duchess Disappeared Read online60 The Duchess DisappearedA Dangerous Disguise Read onlineA Dangerous DisguiseLove at the Tower Read onlineLove at the TowerThe Star of Love Read onlineThe Star of LoveSignpost To Love Read onlineSignpost To LoveSecret Love Read onlineSecret LoveRevenge of the Heart Read onlineRevenge of the HeartLove Rescues Rosanna Read onlineLove Rescues RosannaFollow Your Heart Read onlineFollow Your HeartA Revolution Of Love Read onlineA Revolution Of LoveThe Dare-Devil Duke Read onlineThe Dare-Devil DukeA Heaven on Earth Read onlineA Heaven on EarthRivals for Love Read onlineRivals for LoveThe Glittering Lights (Bantam Series No. 12) Read onlineThe Glittering Lights (Bantam Series No. 12)70 A Witch's Spell Read online70 A Witch's SpellThe Queen Wins Read onlineThe Queen WinsLove Finds the Way Read onlineLove Finds the WayWish for Love Read onlineWish for LoveThe Temptation of Torilla Read onlineThe Temptation of TorillaThe Devil Defeated Read onlineThe Devil DefeatedThe Dream and the Glory Read onlineThe Dream and the GloryJourney to love Read onlineJourney to loveToo Precious to Lose Read onlineToo Precious to LoseKiss from a Stranger Read onlineKiss from a StrangerA Duke in Danger Read onlineA Duke in DangerLove Wins In Berlin Read onlineLove Wins In BerlinThe Wild Cry of Love Read onlineThe Wild Cry of LoveA Battle of Brains Read onlineA Battle of BrainsA Castle of Dreams Read onlineA Castle of DreamsThe Unwanted Wedding Read onlineThe Unwanted Wedding64 The Castle Made for Love Read online64 The Castle Made for Love202. Love in the Dark Read online202. Love in the DarkLove Is Dangerous Read onlineLove Is Dangerous107. Soft, Sweet & Gentle Read online107. Soft, Sweet & GentleA Kiss In the Desert Read onlineA Kiss In the DesertA Virgin Bride Read onlineA Virgin BrideThe Disgraceful Duke Read onlineThe Disgraceful DukeLook Listen and Love Read onlineLook Listen and LoveA Hazard of Hearts Read onlineA Hazard of Hearts104. the Glittering Lights Read online104. the Glittering LightsA Marriage Made In Heaven Read onlineA Marriage Made In HeavenRescued by Love Read onlineRescued by LoveLove Came From Heaven Read onlineLove Came From HeavenJourney to Happiness Read onlineJourney to Happiness106. Love's Dream in Peril Read online106. Love's Dream in PerilThe Castle of Love Read onlineThe Castle of LoveTouching the Stars Read onlineTouching the Stars169. A Cheiftain finds Love (The Eternal Collection) Read online169. A Cheiftain finds Love (The Eternal Collection)171. The Marquis Wins (The Eternal Collection) Read online171. The Marquis Wins (The Eternal Collection)Sailing to Love Read onlineSailing to LoveThe Unbreakable Spell Read onlineThe Unbreakable SpellThe Cruel Count (Bantam Series No. 28) Read onlineThe Cruel Count (Bantam Series No. 28)The Secret of the Glen Read onlineThe Secret of the GlenDanger to the Duke Read onlineDanger to the DukeThe Peril and the Prince Read onlineThe Peril and the PrinceThe Duke Is Deceived Read onlineThe Duke Is DeceivedA Road to Romance Read onlineA Road to RomanceA King In Love Read onlineA King In LoveLove and the Clans Read onlineLove and the ClansLove and the Gods Read onlineLove and the GodsThe Incredible Honeymoon (Bantam Series No. 46) Read onlineThe Incredible Honeymoon (Bantam Series No. 46)Pure and Untouched Read onlinePure and UntouchedWanted a Royal Wife Read onlineWanted a Royal WifeThe Castle Read onlineThe Castle63 Ola and the Sea Wolf Read online63 Ola and the Sea WolfCount the Stars Read onlineCount the StarsThe Winning Post Is Love Read onlineThe Winning Post Is LoveDancing on a Rainbow Read onlineDancing on a RainbowLove by the Lake Read onlineLove by the LakeFrom Hell to Heaven Read onlineFrom Hell to HeavenThe Triumph of Love Read onlineThe Triumph of Love