"exciting Regency romantic suspense"
Her parents expect her to concentrate on marrying the
Earl, Marcus Deveraux, but Anna Rosewood is distracted;
she vows to bring to justice the unknown assailant who
murdered her twin brother Anthony. Her only clue is a
letter Anthony had containing no words just a circle with
pictures of a sword and black rose inside. At a Vauxhall Gardens masquerade party, Anna pretends to
be a light skirt so that she can enter a pavilion with the
same symbols as the letter contains. Working undercover
for the government to uncover the person responsible for
the dueling deaths of young aristocrats, Marcus' cousin,
Roman Deveraux, sees Rose and makes a bid for her; both
are stunned by his kiss, but she flees. At a family dinner to introduce Anna to Marcus'
family, "Rose" and Rome recognize one another. He wonders
if she is taking his cousin for a ride so he investigates
her while she continues her inquiries into her sibling's
death while they also fall in love. However, he rejects
his feelings because he refuses to cause the same type of
scandal that his father once caused; besides which he does
not trust the enigmatic Rose. This exciting Regency romantic suspense catches the
reader's attention on two levels; that of who leads the
mysterious sword and black rose gang and how the lead
couple will come together without hurting the nice
Marcus. The former is what brings Anna and Rome together
though that also includes a strong dose of distrust; while
the latter turns into a delightful triangle and more.
Historical romance fans will enjoy this fine thriller with
a final shocker of a twist that leaves a secondary
protagonist deserving a future tale. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted May 13, 2006
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