

Although Sarah dislikes her fiance's snobbery and Anthony loathes a mercantile marriage, they take a chance on each other. "About this title" may belong to another edition of this title. Rating details 536 ratings 44 reviews The handsome but debt-ridden Anthony Selbourne, Duke of Cheviot, marries Sarah Patterson, granddaughter of a wealthy merchant.

Will love and trust conquer all? Suspenseful plotting and solid characterizations will keep readers riveted.Ĭopyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. When attempts are made on Sarah's life, the twisted finger of suspicion suddenly points to Anthony. A foe is introduced in Max, Anthony's jealous secretary who perceives Sarah as a rival. But Anthony encourages more than her art, and the two are surprised by an unexpected and intense love. Anthony seduces her with his extraordinary good looks and promises to encourage her artistic endeavors. Lovely British aristocrat Lady Barbara Carr is wed to the wealthy Virginian Alan Maxwell, in order to pay her fathers debts, and finds herself torn between. Sarah doesn't want to marryAshe'd rather paint. The only way that Anthony Selbourne, the new Duke of Cheviot, can save his centuries-old estate and redeem his father's debts is by marrying "golden girl" Sarah Patterson, granddaughter of a vulgar multimillionaire. Wolf (The Arrangement, etc.) uses her polished storytelling skills to unravel a peculiar arranged marriage in her newest Regency.
