The Chieftain Without a Heart Read online

Page 3


  “But my father would not listen to reason,” the Duke said cynically. “How old is Torquil now?”

  “He will be seventeen next birthday, Your Grace – the same age as you were when you ran away.”

  The information, the Duke knew, was given to make him realise that Torquil had felt just as he himself had – rebellious, angry and determined to do something about it.

  “Has he been educated at all?” he asked.

  “Yes, Your Grace. Your father engaged several excellent Tutors for him, but unfortunately he found them boring.”

  “I am not surprised at that,” the Duke said, “knowing the type of man my father would engage.”

  “He needs, Your Grace, to play games with boys of his own age and his own class.”

  “And those who were captured with him?”

  “Crofters’ sons, decent boys, but of course, Your Grace, uneducated.”

  “The whole thing is out of date. Ridiculous! It should never have been allowed to happen!” the Duke stormed.

  Even as he spoke, he knew he was being unfair. Mr. Dunblane had surely done the best he could for Torquil, just as he had done the best he could for himself, but against his father’s obstinacy and supreme authority anything he could have suggested would have proved hopeless from the start.

  “Well, what are we going to do?” he asked more quietly.

  “I have arranged tentatively for you to call and see The Kilcraig tomorrow. He will not come here.”

  “Do you mean that I have to go to him?”

  “It may seem a loss of face. At the same time he holds the trump card, Your Grace.”

  “Torquil!” the Duke murmured.

  “Exactly!”

  “Very well. But I warn you, Dunblane, that, if The Kilcraig makes it too difficult, I shall tell young Torquil he can go to the devil!”

  The Duke spoke violently, but even as he did so he knew he was shadow-boxing.

  It would be quite impossible for him to allow his nephew and his heir presumptive to come up for trial in the Edinburgh courts like a common felon.

  What was more, it would not be Torquil who would be humiliated and punished, but the whole Clan. They all bore the same name. They all believed themselves to be part of the same stock.

  He knew that every Clansman on his lands would fight to the death for his own family and his honour, just as he would fight any battle his Chief might lead him into.

  “The sooner we get this over the better!” the Duke said sharply. “Send a message to The Kilcraig that I will call on him at noon tomorrow. I presume you will come with me?”

  “If you are going into Kilcraig country, Your Grace, you must travel as befits your position. Not to do so would be looked upon as a sign of weakness.”

  The Duke looked at his Comptroller in surprise.

  “What does that imply?”

  “You will go with your immediate henchmen, bard, piper and gillies, as your forefathers travelled before you.”

  “God in Heaven! In this day and age, is this necessary?” the Duke asked.

  “As I have said already, if you do anything else it will be looked on as a sign of weakness and at the moment, as Your Grace knows full well, you have no good cards in your hand.”

  The Duke thumped with his clenched fist on the arm of his chair.

  “This is intolerable! What is more, I feel, Dunblane, as if I have stepped back into the past. In England Noblemen do not hold each other’s children as prisoners. Duelling is almost out of date and an argument is conducted in a gentlemanly manner over a glass of port!”

  “Unfortunately, Your Grace, The Kilcraig is very like your father, who would always rather have used a claymore than a sensible argument.”

  “Very well,” the Duke said harshly. “Have it your own way! I will leave everything to you, Dunblane, and I only hope we can retain some vestige of pride out of all this tomfoolery!”

  He walked towards the door and, only as he reached it, did he turn back to say,

  “Do you expect me to get myself up in fancy dress?”

  “If you mean should you wear the tartan? Your Grace must meet The Kilcraig as a Chieftain – the Chief of the McNarns.”

  The Duke did not reply, but went out of the library, slamming the door behind him.

  CHAPTER TWO

  The Duke was in an extremely bad temper.

  He had in fact got up with what his Highland nurse would have called ‘a wee black devil’ on his shoulder. His valet had laid out for him, obviously on Mr. Dunblane’s instructions, the Highland dress that he had brought from London.

  He had taken very little interest in it and had merely given the order to his tailor to make what was necessary.

  He was to realise later that the tailor was in fact a conscientious man who had taken immense trouble in finding out what was the correct regalia for a Chieftain.

  The Duke saw lying on the chair after he had finished his bath, trews of skin-tight tartan that a Chief would wear when he preferred to ride rather than walk.

  There was also a tartan jacket, a tartan waistcoat and the plaid that would be clasped with a silver and Cairngorm brooch on his left shoulder.

  He had seen his father often enough wearing the same traditional garments, but quite suddenly he revolted.

  “Take them away!” he cried out harshly. “I will wear the clothes of the gentleman which I am and which I hope to remain!”

  When he went down to breakfast, he thought that the kilted servants attending him glanced at him with a question in their eyes.

  It made him even more determined than ever that he would not pander to the ridiculous nonsense of ancient customs which should be ‘as dead as a doornail’.

  Deliberately, so as to avoid mention of the ordeal that lay ahead of him, he said in a conversational tone to Lord Hinchley,

  “What do you intend to do with yourself today, William?”

  “Something that will make you extremely envious,” Lord Hinchley replied. “I am going fishing.”

  The Duke did not reply and he went on,

  “Dunblane tells me there are plenty of salmon in your river and tomorrow, if you can spare the time, Taran, I should like to have a shot at your grouse.”

  The fact that his friend intended to do some things he would have liked to do himself did not improve the Duke’s temper.

  He merely concerned himself with breakfast which he found, despite a desire to find fault, extremely appetising. As he was finishing the excellent dish of sea trout, his nephew Jamie came into the room.

  He had only a brief glance at the boy the evening before when he arrived and now he appraised him more critically, noticing that he had red hair and blue eyes.

  He found that surprising until he remembered that it was characteristic of the Campbells – The Race of Diarmid – and Jamie’s grandmother on his father’s side had belonged to that Clan.

  As he had obviously been instructed to do, Jamie bowed first to him, then to Lord Hinchley.

  “Good morning, Jamie,” the Duke said perfunctorily.

  “It is not a good morning!” Jamie replied hotly. “Jeannie says I should be coming with you today to fight The Kilcraigs, but Mr. Dunblane will not let me.”

  “I am not going to fight the Kilcraigs,” the Duke replied, “so Jeannie, whoever she may be, has been misinformed.”

  “They are our enemies and we hate them!” Jamie insisted. “You must battle with them as Chief of the McNarns and I should be with you.”

  The Duke sighed impatiently.

  It seemed that even the child was inoculated with these barbaric customs, for he was well aware that if a Chieftain went into battle, his kinsmen accompanied him besides all the other henchmen whom Dunblane had mentioned last night.

  “Now let me make this quite clear,” he said firmly. “I am not fighting the Kilcraigs nor do I intend to do so. Those feuds and hatreds are out of date. They are our neighbours and we must learn to live in peace with them.”

&n
bsp; “In peace with the Kilcraigs?” Jamie exclaimed. “And also the MacAuads?”

  “With both!” the Duke said firmly and concentrated on his breakfast.

  He knew that his small nephew was staring at him in surprise and also with what he thought was an expression perilously near contempt.

  It was an impertinence, he told himself, that should be severely corrected, but not this morning, not when he had so many other troubles on his hands.

  Jamie had, however, started off a train of thought, which returned to his mind when he was wending his way up the moors.

  Behind the Duke came, as Mr. Dunblane had predicted, a procession of mounted Clansmen, although the Duke knew that in the past they would have walked with the piper playing a battle-tune to stir their senses and accelerate their progress.

  As it was over a two hour ride to Kilcraig Castle, the Duke was grateful that at least he was permitted to travel there on horseback and he guessed that his entourage had been reduced in size to fit the availability of horses to mount them.

  Nevertheless he told himself sourly that there were quite enough and by the expression on his henchmen’s faces they were all as ready as Jamie had been for a fight with their traditional enemy.

  The Duke, however, had no intention of doing anything but rescue Torquil and he hoped to create a new spirit between the Clans, which would prevent this sort of escapade from happening in the future.

  With the MacAuads it was a different cup of tea all together.

  The lands of the McNarns stretched Eastward for many miles and the Clans between them and the sea were either too small to be of any importance or united by marriage with what amounted to blood ties.

  But all through the centuries, the MacAuads, a wild uncouth and savage Clan, had been an hereditary enemy whom every other Clan hated and feared.

  They shared the Western border of the McNarn lands with the Kilcraigs and, while the latter were in some way almost a respected enemy, the MacAuads’ deeds had put them beyond the pale of any emotion save that of utter loathing.

  “Touch a snake and ye’ll find a MacAuad!” was a current phrase amongst the Clansmen.

  Another said even more forcefully,

  “If ye go down to Hell, ye’ll find the devil is MacAuad.”

  Not having heard of the MacAuads since he was a boy, the Duke wondered if they were still so ferocious.

  He imagined that, if there was any cattle-stealing in this part of the world, it would be done by the MacAuads, not as a boyish prank but deliberately to enrich themselves at another Clan’s expense.

  It was a clear day with just a touch of wind, the heather smelt fragrant and the purple of it was more vivid than the Duke remembered.

  There was enough water still left in the burns to make him feel sure that Lord Hinchley would catch several salmon.

  It was unfortunate that he could not join his friend, but instead was forced to expend his time and his energy in visiting a man he had never seen and in the uncomfortable position of a supplicant.

  Then the Duke told himself that The Kilcraig would surely listen to reason.

  He supposed that if he paid the full price for the cattle that Torquil had stolen and perhaps made it more generous than the animals were worth, the whole confrontation would die down.

  “Why Dunblane could not have settled the matter for me, God only knows!” the Duke muttered beneath his breath.

  Then he knew that was impossible, because only a Chief speaking to a Chief could negotiate over problems which concerned a Clan and Dunblane would have no authority despite his long connection with the McNarns.

  The Duke’s thoughts were back to his position as a Chieftain.

  It had been impossible not to notice the solicitousness, which was almost an act of reverence, with which he had been helped onto the saddle of his horse and the way the henchmen saluted him.

  The women who had been waiting at the gates to The Castle to see him leave curtseyed while the Clansmen amongst them had lifted their bonnets and waved them at his approach.

  The Duke remembered now when he was a small boy about the same age as Jamie, saying to his father,

  “Why do they love you, Papa?”

  His father’s answer had been simple.

  “I am their Chief.”

  “What does Chief mean?” the little boy had insisted.

  His father, speaking solemnly almost as if he was thinking aloud, had replied,

  “The Highlanders esteem it a most sublime degree of virtue to love their Chief and ply him with a blood obedience, though it be opposition to the Government and the law of the Kingdom or even the law of God. He is their idol and they know no King but him.”

  The Duke repeated the words now to himself and he wondered if it was possible to find anywhere in the world this unquestioning subservience that was not only for the Chief himself but for what he stood for in his followers’ imagination.

  God knows his father did not deserve such devotion, and yet he had received it just because he was invested with the authority that had been handed down through the centuries.

  It was somehow embarrassing as if one looked into another man’s heart and soul.

  ‘The sooner I get back to sanity,’ the Duke told himself savagely, ‘the better!’

  He had decided before he left London that he would return South with the King on the Royal George.

  He knew that His Majesty would be only too pleased to have him and he was quite sure that it would be an amusing voyage. They would all be able to laugh over the incidents that invariably occurred on such occasions.

  The King, the Duke knew, was taking his visit very seriously.

  Ever since he had decided to go to Scotland, he had talked about it with an enthusiasm that surprised those in attendance, who were quite sure that he would be disappointed at what he found in the most Northern part of his Kingdom.

  But, when George IV made up his mind to do something, there were few people brave enough to dissuade him and the arrangements had gone ahead.

  The Duke supposed that by this time Edinburgh was in a fervour of excitement and anticipation and he certainly had no wish to be there.

  He was, however, hot and thirsty by the time they had ridden for over two hours and had the first sight of Kilcraig Castle.

  The Duke had never seen it before and he realised that it was a very different building from his own.

  From its vantage point on the side of the hill, it would have been impossible for an enemy to approach through the valley without being seen and there was something weird and eerie about its high walls with few windows.

  Vaguely at the back of his mind the Duke remembered when he was young hearing that the Kilcraigs had ghosts and evil spirits besides ancestors who were cruel monsters, one of them having kidnapped children to use as sacrifices in his sorceries.

  The Duke had not believed such stories even when he was a boy and yet now, looking at the castle in the distance, he could understand how they had arisen.

  There was something about it that stirred the imagination and would, he was quite certain, arouse to wild flights of fancy, the superstitions of a primitive people who had been brought up to believe in such things.

  The Duke had long ago laughed to scorn the Celtic mythology of giants, witches, unconquerable swordsmen, loch monsters, precognitions, and stones that spoke with the voices of men and singing trees.

  In the South, while few people he knew were concerned with anything but their own amusements, even religion was spoken of with a faint air of mockery.

  While the King was obliged to attend Divine Service on Sundays, the Duke and his contemporaries spent their Sunday like any other day in sport and gaming.

  They were within a mile of the castle when Mr. Dunblane moved his horse beside the Duke’s.

  “From here, Your Grace,” he said in a low voice, “we will all leave our horses with the exception of yourself.”

  “Why?” the Duke enquired.

  �
��The Kilcraig, as was your father, is a stickler for custom.”

  The Duke was about to reply that the Kilcraig could go to hell, then he told himself that the purpose of the meeting was to be conciliatory and to anger the old man before it had even started would be foolish.

  “Arrange things as you wish, Dunblane,” he said curtly and rode on.

  He was, however, well aware that the horses were being left in the charge of henchmen and a procession had formed behind him on foot.

  First came Dunblane as his immediate bodyguard and with him should have been his kinsmen, if Torquil had not been a prisoner of the Kilcraigs and Jamie too young.

  Then came the bard, an old man whom the Duke remembered since his father’s time.

  Barding was hereditary and carried with it a grant of land. The Highlands had no written history and a man’s reputation and the memory of it could rise or fall on the tongue of the bard.

  The Duke wondered wryly what would be said about him when he was dead and thought it unlikely that his behaviour would inspire an epic poem.

  Behind the bard came the piper, who now was playing the marching tune of the McNarns – a tune that led them into battle and accompanied them on their last journey to the cemetery of their forefathers.

  Behind the piper should have been the bladier, the chief spokesman, a golden-voiced man of debate and argument who knew every precedent in every quarrel.

  If he was there then he was unnecessary, as the Duke had every intention of speaking for himself and certainly allowing no one else to interview on his behalf.

  Behind these there should have been a gillie to carry his broadsword and buckler and several others who in the past would have been swordsmen, axemen, bowmen or musket-men.

  It was compulsory for a Clan which was visited by the Chief of another Clan to bed and feed these wild, often savage men without protest.

  Except in the case of a Clan like the MacAuads, once having accepted a Clan’s hospitality and eaten their salt, there would be no more fighting until they had left the land.

  As they drew nearer to Kilcraig Castle, the Duke saw the Clansmen waiting for him.

  He was surprised to see so many of them wearing the tartan. He had been told in the South that after the ban on it had been lifted in 1799 many of the Scots after years of persecution by the English had been too lethargic to reintroduce their own tartan.

 

    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