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DescriptionNew York Times bestselling author Karen Robards deliciously mixes adventure and romance in her beloved tale of a buccaneer and a convent girl--a romance so magnificent it will make your pulse pound and your heart rejoice. Orphaned heiress Lady Amanda Rose Culver wanted to run from the injured man she found on the rocky shore near her convent school. But his hard-muscled hand stopped her even before she saw the pain and longing in his eyes. And she trembled, not with fear, but with a desire to believe in his story, his innocence, his passion. New World privateer Matt Grayson, unjustly accused of murder by the British Crown, has narrowly escaped hanging. Now his freedom depends on winning this beautiful girl's co-operation so he can sail back to New Orleans. He never meant to hold her captive on his ship. He never meant to fall in love. . . .
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ExcerptsFrom the book...
Matthew Grayson lifted his face to the bright April sunshine and sniffed the sweetness of the air, an automatic gesture born of years spent at sea at the helm of his own ship. In those days -- were they only a few months ago? -- he had thrived on storms and dangers and challenges of every sort, thrived on pitting his courage and skill against anything that sea or sky or man -- or woman -- could throw at them. Grappling with death had always exhilarated him, making his blood sing with the sheer joy of being alive. Only now, when death was a grim reality and not a faceless chimera, had the singing abruptly stopped. His eyes flickered once in his otherwise carefully expressionless face as he thought briefly, longingly, of happier days. The first time his men had seen him laughing at death -- he had been hurling mocking defiance in the teeth of a killer hurricane that had sunk a hundred ships from one end of the Atlantic to the other -- they had looked at one another in quaking disbelief, silently questioning his sanity. Then, when their own ship, the Lucie Belle, had emerged from the tempest unscathed, the more superstitious among them had stared fearfully at their black-haired, swarthy-skinned captain. His teeth were flashing white in an exultant grin as he worked with unflagging energy while the crew was ready to drop from the exhaustion of more than forty-eight hours spent battling the storm. And, one by one, they had crossed themselves. It was then that the whispers began: Matt Grayson had made a pact with the devil, had bartered his soul for his own and his ship's safety. The Lucie Belle was blessed or cursed, depending on the speaker's point of view. It was a rumor that Matt did nothing to encourage, but he didn't discourage it, either, because from then on men lined up in droves to sail on his ship whenever she docked in her home port of New Orleans. For every vacancy there were twenty applicants, and Matt liked being able to pick and choose. He prided himself on having the best crew afloat, and, in turn, the men prided themselves on their captain's invincibility. It seemed that nothing could touch Matt Grayson -- not storms, not bullets, not knives, not even the occasional jealous husband. Nothing, until the devil was ready to claim his own. The less superstitious among his crew had another, simpler explanation for their captain's uncanny ability to bring them safely through the worst the sea could throw at them. "Those born to be hanged will never drown" was what they said of him when the ocean rose up in fury and threatened to crush the LucieBelle's hull like a giant, angry fist holding an eggshell, only to set her down again safely in calmer waters some hours later. The saying kept his men from despairing when the waves were thirty feet high and the sea and the sky met and seethed like a briny mixture from hell's blackest caldron. Matt, hearing the words passed like a talisman from man to man, would throw back his head and laugh in incredulous amazement that grown men, and hardened sea dogs at that, could take comfort in something so ridiculous. But he was not laughing today -- had not been laughing for some time now -- because it looked as if he would, after all, meet the fate the men had prophesied for him. SynopsisA sexy historical classic from Karen Robards--a well-loved writer of contemporary and historical romance.
ReviewsJohanna Lindsey, author of All I Need Is You...
"Karen [Robards] is one of those writers I buy without needing to read a review."
Romantic Times...
"By far Ms. Robards's best novel and one that readers will remember for a long time."
About the Author
Karen lives with her family in Louisville, KY.
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