Margins
The Swordmaster's Mistress book cover
The Swordmaster's Mistress
2017
First Published
4.30
Average Rating
287
Number of Pages

Part of Series

What can a man who is living a lie honorably offer to the woman he loves? How can a lady betrayed learn to trust a man of secrets? Employed to investigate the harassment of the wife of an elderly viscount, sword master Jared Hunt finds persecution turning to murder and his professional detachment transforming into desire for the lovely young widow he must now protect. The attraction is mutual, but Guinevere senses that her protector is both suspicious of her own murky past and hiding secrets of his own. When the trail of the killer leads them to Yorkshire Jared has to confront the treachery and lies that drove him from his home and together with Guinevere solve both the mystery that entangles them and the dilemma of their feelings for each other.
Avg Rating
4.30
Number of Ratings
152
5 STARS
46%
4 STARS
41%
3 STARS
10%
2 STARS
3%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Louise Allen
Louise Allen
Author · 76 books

Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name. See this thread for more information. This author also writes under the name Francesca Shaw. I have had my nose buried in a history book - fact or fiction - for as long as I can remember, but even more important to me are the places and the objects that conjure up the past. My first attempt at historical fiction at the age of eight was three pages of improbable medieval drama set in the local castle. With a degree in geography and archaeology I love to try and 'read' the landscape and the buildings in it for clues about the past. Virtually any place can trigger ideas for plots, but I am particularly inspired by Venice, Burgundy, Mediterranean islands and the Hertfordshire and Norfolk countryside. I live in England in a village in Bedfordshire with my long-suffering husband. He is not sure whether to be flattered or alarmed to be told he is the inspiration for all my romantic heroes! Whenever possible we escape to our cottage on the North Norfolk coast where Percy, the bossy pheasant, allows us to share the garden. My resolution every time I start on a new plot is to plan it carefully, make copious notes first and write lots of drafts in a disciplined and orderly manner. What inevitably happens is that the story starts to write itself in my head until it gets completely out of control - meanwhile my study floor becomes a sea of open books, prints and maps and I am found sitting in the car at traffic lights, muttering dialogue. At that point I have to start writing, knowing full well that the hero and heroine are going to take over and sabotage all my attempts at discipline. It is, after all, their story.

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