Meddle in a Marquess’s Affairs by Tammy Andresen

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Meddle in a Marquess’s Affairs by Tammy Andresen
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Rakes make the worst husbands…
Not that Rex Baluster, the Marquess of Highwater would want her anyway. But when he arrived at Lady Camille Ducat’s door shot and near death, she didn’t hesitate to help him. She had no reputation to preserve after all. She’d given that up when she ended her engagement to another rake. And though her heart beat wildly every time she looked at Rex, she knew that to involve herself with such a man would only lead to heartache.
When the Duke of Longley asked him to help right a wrong, Rex agreed without question. He wasn’t like most lords, having grown up as a street urchin in London’s notorious Docklands. He talked best with his fists. Nor was he afraid when he was wounded. Somehow, Rex had always assumed his end would be as violent as his beginning. What he didn’t expect was for a beautiful angel with the gentlest touch he’s ever known to nurse him back to health. If only he were the type of man who could be a good husband to Lady Camille.
The more time Rex spends with Camille, however, the harder it is to deny his feelings. Can they put their pasts aside? Rakes, after all, make the BEST husbands.

  • File Name:meddle-in-a-marquesss-affairs-by-tammy-andresen.epub
  • Original Title:Meddle in a Marquess’s Affairs: How to Reform a Rake
  • Creator:
  • Language:en
  • Identifier:3823339916
  • Date:2019-02-26
  • File Size:488.641 KB

Table of Content

  • 1. Title Page
  • 2. Copyright
  • 3. Contents
  • 4. How to Reform a Rake
  • 5. Chapter 1
  • 6. Chapter 2
  • 7. Chapter 3
  • 8. Chapter 4
  • 9. Chapter 5
  • 10. Chapter 6
  • 11. Chapter 7
  • 12. Chapter 8
  • 13. Chapter 9
  • 14. Chapter 10
  • 15. Chapter 11
  • 16. Chapter 12
  • 17. Chapter 13
  • 18. Chapter 14
  • 19. Chapter 15
  • 20. Chapter 16
  • 21. Chapter 17
  • 22. Chapter 18
  • 23. Chapter 19
  • 24. Epilogue
  • 25. Never Trust an Errant Earl
  • 26. Other Titles by Tammy Andresen
  • 27. About the Author

1 comments
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Kiley O
Kiley O

Meddle in a Marquess’s Affairs, Book 2 of the How to Reform a Rake series, was about Lord Reginald "Rex" Baluster, the Marquess of Highwater, and Lady Camille "Cami" Ducat, eldest of five daughters of Lord Harold Rosemond, the Earl of Ducat. When His Grace, Max, the Duke of Longley and his best friend, asked him to help deal with a man who had attacked his wife back in the Spring, Rex was only too willing to assist. After spotting and then chasing Lord Michael Ralston (Camille's former fiance) through their club and out into the streets, the scoundrel pulled out a pistol and shot Rex in the side. Rushing him to his home, Max, the coachman, and both Lily and her sister Camille, carried him into a bed-chamber before calling a doctor to aid him. Several months before, Camille, having gone against their mother's demands, had assisted Max and her sister Lily with getting married. Max and Lily had provided her with a place to stay when their mother had turned her out of her home. On hearing why Rex had been shot, and by whom, decided to nurse him back to health. Unknown to Camille, Rex, like Max and their three other friends, had made a bet with a gypsy fortune teller, that each one of them must collect a kiss from one lady of worth, and Camille was the lady Rex was to kiss. When she found out, it angered and hurt her, as she had already had a bad experience with one rake, was she destined to continue on with such mistakes with him too? Unfortunately for Camille, her mother schemed to have her betrothed once again with Lord Ralston, even though the man had attacked one of her other daughters. Thankfully, Lily, Max, and Rex came to her rescue. The chemistry between Camille and Rex was immediate and the attraction just kept growing. Because of her mother and Lord Ralston, the drama and angst stayed high. But oh the humor that was woven into the mix! There was even a bit of intrigue. The stories in this series just keep getting better. This one would have earned five stars if it hadn't been for the verbiage and wrong forms of address for the titled lords. The inconsistencies in that regard have been prominent with this particular author, unfortunately.

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