"Entertaining Georgian amateur sleuth romance"
In 1785 England, a gypsy woman dies in childbirth, but the
boy Dante, sired by an aristocrat, survives. His
grandfather the Marquis of Alston hides the birth of Dante
from his son, Alex, the lad's biological father and pays
the kid's maternal grandparents to raise him. Lord Alston regrets his decision of three decades ago; his
son died ten years ago with no other heir and his nephew
Calvin is a gambling wastrel. Alston knows that if Calvin
becomes Marquis, the proud name will quickly dissolve into
bankruptcy. A desperate Alston modifies his will
recognizing Dante as heir with the stipulation that he
marry Lady Esme Harcourt within six months of gaining the
title. Dante wants nothing to do with his paternal grandfather
and his title. However, when someone kills Lord Alston,
Dante accepts this as a blood debt; he needs the title to
walk in the exclusive circles he must step into to
complete his quest of bringing the killer to Romany
justice. Dante accepts the rider that Lady Esme be his
wife especially since he has previously tasted her lips
though he loathes that she is a purebred aristocrat; in
turns Esme scorns gypsies. This is loaded with action but it is the lead couple who
makes the tale so much fun to read. Dante and Esme may
love each other, but each is loaded down with the heavy
chains of prejudice. He detests the upper crust while she
disdains the Romany. As they fall in love, Dante's
investigation leans towards Calvin as the prime suspect
but he has new concerns when he places his beloved Esme in
danger. Fans will enjoy Connie Mason's delightful
landlubber historical tale. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted April 4, 2005
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