Difference between revisions of "Runaway Maid"

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(New page: “She’s a fine lady who will suit Sir Giles well.” Robina’s heart sank at the words. The thought of Sir Giles marrying another woman was more than she could stand. But there was not...)
 
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[[Category:Category Romance]][[category:1979 Releases]][[category:Historical Romance]]
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* '''Author''': [[Ann Edgeworth]]
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* '''Publisher''': [[Mills and Boon]], [[Mills and Boon Historical Romance 1 - 100|Masquerade #0041]]
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* '''Year''': 1979
 
“She’s a fine lady who will suit Sir Giles well.” Robina’s heart sank at the words. The thought of Sir Giles marrying another woman was more than she could stand. But there was nothing she could do about the situation. Her pose as a member of the servant class rendered her completely out of the running for Sir Giles’s affections. Oh, how she wished she’d never committed this ruse! For how could she tell him she was actually Sir Humphrey’s daughter? To do so now would serve only to make her a laughingstock in Sir Gile’s mocking eyes.
 
“She’s a fine lady who will suit Sir Giles well.” Robina’s heart sank at the words. The thought of Sir Giles marrying another woman was more than she could stand. But there was nothing she could do about the situation. Her pose as a member of the servant class rendered her completely out of the running for Sir Giles’s affections. Oh, how she wished she’d never committed this ruse! For how could she tell him she was actually Sir Humphrey’s daughter? To do so now would serve only to make her a laughingstock in Sir Gile’s mocking eyes.

Revision as of 01:54, 24 August 2007

“She’s a fine lady who will suit Sir Giles well.” Robina’s heart sank at the words. The thought of Sir Giles marrying another woman was more than she could stand. But there was nothing she could do about the situation. Her pose as a member of the servant class rendered her completely out of the running for Sir Giles’s affections. Oh, how she wished she’d never committed this ruse! For how could she tell him she was actually Sir Humphrey’s daughter? To do so now would serve only to make her a laughingstock in Sir Gile’s mocking eyes.