Filled with seduction, suspense, and passionate love, Madeline Hunterās bestselling novels have captivated readers everywhere. Now she introduces fans to one of her most thrilling heroes yetāāthe Sinnerāāin an irresistible tale of a sensual bargain so dangerously provocative, it could tempt the devil himself . . .
THE SINNER
Wearing nothing but a manās nightshirt, Fleur Monley wakes to find herself in the bed of Englandās most charming and reckless libertine. But it was a stray gunshot, not passion, that put her at the mercy of a man as infamously handsome as he is famously talented in the arts of love. Believing herself immune to any seduction, Fleur thinks herself perfectly safe to proffer an arrangement no ordinary woman would dare make: half her fortune for the freedom she would gain by being his wifeāin name only. Desperately in need of funds, Dante Duclaire could do worse than the āwhite marriageā proposed by this idealistic beauty too naĆÆve to know the danger she is in. But the rashest thing heās ever done is to tell himself heāll be able to resist the invitation to sin that this sensuous innocent would arouse at every turnāor that heāll be able to protect her from both the ruthless enemies that seek her ruin . . . and his own dangerous desire.
Filled with seduction, suspense, and passionate love, Madeline Hunterās bestselling novels have captivated readers everywhere. Now she introduces fans to one of her most thrilling heroes yetāāthe Sinnerāāin an irresistible tale of a sensual bargain so dangerously provocative, it could tempt the devil himself . . .
THE SINNER
Wearing nothing but a manās nightshirt, Fleur Monley wakes to find herself in the bed of Englandās most charming and reckless libertine. But it was a stray gunshot, not passion, that put her at the mercy of a man as infamously handsome as he is famously talented in the arts of love. Believing herself immune to any seduction, Fleur thinks herself perfectly safe to proffer an arrangement no ordinary woman would dare make: half her fortune for the freedom she would gain by being his wifeāin name only. Desperately in need of funds, Dante Duclaire could do worse than the āwhite marriageā proposed by this idealistic beauty too naĆÆve to know the danger she is in. But the rashest thing heās ever done is to tell himself heāll be able to resist the invitation to sin that this sensuous innocent would arouse at every turnāor that heāll be able to protect her from both the ruthless enemies that seek her ruin . . . and his own dangerous desire.