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Once Too Often

A Simon & Schuster eBook. Simon & Schuster has a great book for every reader.
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Dark Prince

All books in the Dark Gothic Series are stand-alone stories that can be read in any order. Innkeeper's daughter Jane Heatherington is sold into indentured servitude to cover her father's debts, sold to Aidan Warrick, a man whose handsome face and form mock the rumors that skulk in his shadow, rumors that paint him a smuggler, a pirate...and worse. On the rainswept Cornish coast, Aidan's business is carried out in the darkest hours of moonless nights, his secrets are many, and death follows in his wake. Isolated and alone, Jane's only companion is the man she dare not trust, the man who looks at her with heated desire that she both fears and craves. As she finds herself ensnared in the twisted schemes carried out within the walls of Aidan's looming estate, Jane must decide if Aidan Warrick is the dark prince of her dreams or a monster preying on the innocent... "With her ability to create the perfect chilling atmosphere, a dark,...
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The Quarterback Sneak

Football player, Liam McQueen, seeks redemption on and off the field. Hayden Middleton, the team’s owner daughter, is just looking to stay out of jail. Will love come into play as the sinner and the saint go head to head?
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Deadly Deceit

Detective Chief Inspector Kate Maddox is on holiday in Lisbon with her partner, Richard Gower, when they meet acquaintances of his. Major Bletchley is tired, but his wife accompanies them to a Fado club. When they return to the hotel the major is dead – murdered. The investigation links to another murder back home in the Cotswolds, and proves very complex for Kate. British Mystery by Nancy Buckingham writing as Erica Quest; originally published by the Piatkus Crime Club.
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New Albion

New Albion follows the lives of the employees of the New Albion theatre in London, England, in 1850, through the journal entries of the stage manager, Emlyn Phillips. Fighting its own reputation, hindered by its location and "sketchy" (at best) audience, as well as a police commissioner who demands "morally upstanding" plays, and a playwright so decrepit and addicted to laudanum that the actors of the New Albion are never sure what toexpect, the troupe attempts to put on the best show possible, each and every night. The reader is introduced to the entire company of actors, all of whom have their own set of issues, who consistently band together as a community and family in the face of every obstacle - and there are more than a few of those. As the theatre encounters problem after problem, Phillips must decide how much he's willing to sacrifice for the sake of his passion.
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