Gabriel’s father, Sebastian, tells Gabriel that another husband can be found for the young lady Gabriel has compromised. Pandora’s guardian, Devon, assures her that she won’t be forced into marriage. Her ambition is to run a board game company and given the property laws of the era, marriage would mean handing over control of her budding business to her husband. Furthermore, Pandora has no desire to marry anyone. Unfortunately, his companion, Lord Chaworth, has an ax to grind with Gabriel’s father and soon, Gabriel and Pandora are entangled in a scandal.īut Pandora is the last woman whom Gabriel should marry, since he is heir to a duke and she has none of the accomplishments that a duchess needs to have. One of the gentlemen, Lord Westcliff, is willing to look the other way. Before her dress snags on the settee’s acanthus scrolls, Pandora is bored, bored, bored, but once Gabriel shows up and attempts to free her, only to be interrupted by two gentlemen, things quickly get all too interesting. Vincent, meet when she gets trapped in an openwork settee while attempting to retrieve a diamond earring for her chaperone’s daughter. Lady Pandora Ravenel and Gabriel, Lord St. The pretty cover and the connection to your past book, Devil in Winter, didn’t hurt, either. Having read both Cold-Hearted Rake and Marrying Winterborne within the past year or two, I was eager for Devil in Spring. Janine B Reviews / Book Reviews aristocrats / Business woman / historical romance / Victorian England / virgin 19 Comments MaREVIEW: Devil in Spring by Lisa Kleypas
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