SummaryAs heel-kickingly fun and high spirited as the ceilidh that
Highland laird Payton Duncan throws to celebrate what he
hopes will be his betrothal to lovely but stubborn neighbor
Mared Lockhart, the final book in London's 19th-century
Highlander trilogy (Highlander Unbound; Highlander in
Disguise) will elicit satisfied sighs from readers. In this
long-awaited installment, a smitten Payton attempts to
convince Mared that it's past time they cast aside the
deep-rooted enmity between their families and marry. But
Mared's agreement to wed Payton is based on a debt the
Lockharts owe him, and instead of gaining Payton's love, she
longs to escape to sophisticated Edinburgh, where no one
will know her curse: that violent death awaits any man
betrothed to a Lockhart daughter. When Mared refuses to
marry him, Payton takes her as his housekeeper for a year to
work off the debt. Proximity forces Mared to realize that
she does love him, but when her family's reversal of
fortunes sends her to Edinburgh, she must choose between
sparkling city life and her laird in the backward Highlands.
Like the earlier books in the series, this one isn't
especially deep, but London's charming hero and impulsive,
vulnerable heroine are so likable—and get into so much
trouble—that it's hard not to get caught up in their
sprightly dance.
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