All Viscount Langdon wants is a bit of quiet to recover from his terrible railway accident, and his private island seems like just the place. But his solitude is disrupted one dark and stormy night when a beautiful aeronaut washes ashore after her hot air balloon collapses, and when he saves her from the ocean, he realizes he knows her all too well. She’s Marlowe, notorious enough for a mononym among the London gossips, a famous mistress who has been attached to the Earl of Hollingsworth for years. Langdon nearly won an evening with her in a card game against Hollingsworth, in fact, and as he appeared to cheat in order not to win, she’s still a bit hurt. Once she comes to and they realize they’re trapped in close proximity by the storm, an intense attraction flares up between them almost immediately, but it’ll have to be a slow burn. Langdon worries he likes her too much to be satisfied with a single encounter, and he also doesn’t want anyone to know that, since his accident, he’s completely lost his ability to understand numbers, undermining his entire life. Marlowe has her own set of secrets, which she’s mulling over as she starts accepting that her life with Hollingsworth may be coming to an end. The two finally give into a sudden deluge of steamy encounters, and their connection goes beyond just the physical. But since Langdon will have to marry and produce an heir soon and Marlowe cares for him too much to become his mistress, both face difficult decisions. Heath’s many fans will be pleased to see her return with such a strong book about the Scoundrels of St. James characters, especially as Langdon’s parents are the beloved couple of an earlier book, In Bed With the Devil (2008). But it also stands alone very well, and is likely to win her new fans, thanks especially to excellent and empathic character development throughout the well-paced story.
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