Her Protector's Pleasure cover art

Her Protector's Pleasure

Mayhem in Mayfair, Volume 3

Preview

Get 30 days of Premium Plus free

£8.99/month after 30-day free trial. Cancel monthly.
Try for £0.00
More purchase options
Buy Now for £18.99

Buy Now for £18.99

About this listen

She Breaks Society's Rules

Wealthy widow Lady Marianne Draven is as notorious for her behavior as she is for her beauty. Unbeknownst to the ton, however, her scandalous image obscures a desperate quest: to find her kidnapped daughter. Clever and daring, Marianne will stop at nothing to get her little girl back ... and the last thing that she expects is for her heart to get in the way.

He Stands for Justice and Orde

A man of honor, Thames River Policeman Ambrose Kent has devoted his life to duty and doing what is right. When his father faces financial ruin, Kent takes on a risky yet lucrative assignment to save his family. Fate has him investigating a mysterious and unscrupulous beauty, a lady he has no right to desire ... and no power to resist.

When Two Opposing Forces Collide

Passion ignites between the unlikely lovers. As secrets unravel, can Marianne and Kent trust one another and work together to rescue her child from a dangerous foe? Can their love survive betrayal ... and will Marianne surrender to Her Protector's Pleasure?

©2013 Grace Callaway (P)2013 Grace Callaway
Fiction Historical Historical Fiction Regency Regency Romance Romance Heartfelt
All stars
Most relevant
It is clearly an American author writing an historic British romance. Normally a small sprinkling of Americanisms would have been ignored, however, when a phoney English accent is mispronouncing very basic words all the time, it becomes annoying. In fact: the dramatic and serious scenes become hilarious 😢 😂. Please can we have Brits narrating British.

If you want to ruin a good book .....

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I found it quite disturbing that the author kept referring to Lugo as the African. As a person from Africa, this has reminded me of being "othered". It would have been okay if she had specified the servant's heritage once but continually saying "The African" instead of his name took away from the enjoyment of the book. It reminds me so much of the unconscious biases that people hold and the roots of racism.

Fun BUT......

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.