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Barbara Cartland

Lucky in Love

Dashing Selby Harle, Lord Harlestone, has a reputation in London as a 'ladies man' and at the instigation of the influential Princess of Wales is all but blackmailed into marrying a Society beauty he does not like let alone love.
And so he decides to escape to America, where he has invested some of his fortune in cattle ranching.
In the wilds of Colorado, where the gold and minerals rush is at fever pitch, even this man of the world is shocked by the brazen houses of pleasure in Denver where 'madams' shamelessly ply their trade.
He is even more appalled when a gang of rough cowboys arrive at one such house with a helpless young waif offering her for sale, who has just lost her mother and father to the Red Indians.
The girl's name, they say, is Nelda Harle. Could this be the daughter of his estranged cousin, 'Handsome Harry', a notorious gambler and 'card sharp'?
Selby feels duty bound to 'purchase' the girl for her own protection and proposes to send her safely home to England as soon as he returns to New York from his associate's Denver Ranch.
Nelda turns out to be a glorious beauty of eighteen and even more stunning when dressed in fashionable gowns.
Fate and love intervene when Arapaho Indians attack the wagon train she is travelling in and Nelda bravely saves Lord Harlestone's life.
And he comes to realise that there is so much more to this young beauty than meets the eye.
170 printed pages
Copyright owner
Barbara Cartland Ebooks Ltd.
Original publication
2019
Publication year
2018
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Impressions

  • Karinashared an impression2 years ago
    👍Worth reading

  • femy bintartoshared an impression2 years ago
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  • Jayshree Gujarshared an impression4 years ago
    👍Worth reading
    🔮Hidden Depths
    🚀Unputdownable

Quotes

  • Mary Augustowiczhas quoted4 years ago
    he knew when she came back to the drawing room that she was nervous and still upset by Waldo
  • Mary Augustowiczhas quoted4 years ago
    who wished to be her lover.

    Of all the other women he had ever known, and there had been a great number of them, Lord Harleston had never for one moment suspected that a woman he fancied would not respond
  • Mary Augustowiczhas quoted4 years ago
    As he thought about it, he remembered that Waldo had said the same.

    “I will teach her to love me,” the young man had said

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