Purchase
Rogues of Regent Street Series Book #1
Dell
April 2000
On Sale: April 11, 2000
Featuring: Lilliana Dashell; Adrian Spence
400 pages
ISBN: 0440235618
EAN: 9780440235613
Paperback
Add to Wish List
Romance Historical
While It Was Snowing, November 2025
Trade Paperback
Everything Is Probably Fine, August 2025
Trade Paperback / e-Book
Nice Work, Nora November, June 2024
Hardcover / e-Book
Highland Scandal, February 2024
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
An Inconvenient Earl, January 2024
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Book of Scandal, October 2023
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Viscount Who Vexed Me, April 2023
Paperback / e-Book / audiobook
The Dangers of Deceiving a Viscount, December 2022
Paperback / e-Book
The Duke Not Taken, October 2022
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Perils of Pursuing a Prince, July 2022
Paperback / e-Book
Last Duke Standing, March 2022
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
It Started with a Dog, October 2021
Trade Size / e-Book / audiobook
The Hazards of Hunting a Duke, September 2021
Paperback / e-Book
A Princess by Christmas, October 2020
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
You Lucky Dog, September 2020
Trade Size / e-Book
One Season of Sunshine, July 2020
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
A Royal Kiss & Tell, May 2020
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Billionaire in Boots, March 2020
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Devil in the Saddle, November 2019
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Princess Plan, November 2019
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Charmer in Chaps, May 2019
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Seduced by a Scot, November 2018
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Tempting the Laird, July 2018
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Devil in Tartan, February 2018
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Suddenly Engaged, August 2017
Paperback / e-Book
Hard-Hearted Highlander, May 2017
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Sinful Scottish Laird, March 2017
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Wild Wicked Scot, January 2017
Paperback / e-Book
Suddenly Dating, November 2016
Paperback / e-Book
Suddenly In Love, April 2016
Paperback / e-Book
The Scoundrel And The Debutante, May 2015
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Perfect Homecoming, March 2015
Paperback / e-Book
The Devil Takes a Bride, February 2015
Paperback / e-Book
One Mad Night, January 2015
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Return to Homecoming Ranch, August 2014
Paperback / e-Book
The Trouble With Honor, March 2014
Paperback / e-Book
The Bridesmaid, October 2013
Paperback / e-Book
Homecoming Ranch, August 2013
Paperback / e-Book
The Last Debutante, March 2013
Paperback / e-Book
Miss Fortune, August 2012
e-Book (reprint)
The Seduction Of Lady X, April 2012
Paperback / e-Book
The Revenge Of Lord Eberlin, March 2012
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Christmas Secret, November 2011
e-Book
Extreme Bachelor, August 2011
e-Book (reprint)
American Diva, August 2011
e-Book (reprint)
Wedding Survivor, August 2011
e-Book (reprint)
Material Girl, May 2011
e-Book (reprint)
Beauty Queen, May 2011
e-Book (reprint)
A Light at Winter's End, March 2011
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Year of Living Scandalously, November 2010
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
One Season Of Sunshine, July 2010
Mass Market Paperback
A Courtesan's Scandal, October 2009
Mass Market Paperback
Summer Of Two Wishes, August 2009
Mass Market Paperback
Highland Scandal, May 2009
Mass Market Paperback
Snowy Night with a Stranger, November 2008
Mass Market Paperback
Guiding Light: Jonathan's Story (Guiding Light), October 2008
Mass Market Paperback
The Book of Scandal, August 2008
Mass Market Paperback
Guiding Light: Jonathan's Story, September 2007
Hardcover
American Diva, August 2007
Trade Size
The School for Heiresses, January 2007
Paperback
Highlander in Love, September 2006
Paperback (reprint)
Highlander in Disguise, September 2006
Paperback (reprint)
Highlander Unbound, September 2006
Paperback (reprint)
Hot Ticket, May 2006
Trade Size
Extreme Bachelor, May 2006
Paperback
Wedding Survivor, October 2005
Paperback
Highlander in Love, August 2005
Paperback
Talk of the Ton, April 2005
Paperback
Highlander In Disguise, February 2005
Paperback
Miss Fortune, November 2004
Paperback
Beauty Queen, April 2004
Paperback
Highlander Unbound, February 2004
Paperback
Material Girl, August 2003
Paperback
The Secret Lover, May 2002
Paperback
Beautiful Stranger, July 2001
Paperback
Ruthless Charmer, October 2000
Paperback
Dangerous Gentleman, April 2000
Paperback
Wicked Angel, March 1999
Paperback
The Devil's Love, December 1998
Paperback
Dunwoody, Southern England, 1834
Phillip Rothembow was dead.
None of the mourners gathered around the grave had
expected his demise to occur precisely this way, although
there were certainly those who had wagered he would not
live to see his thirty-third year. They never dreamed he
would die by forcing the hand of his very own cousin. And
they all agreed--rather adamantly in front of the justice
of the peace--that Adrian Spence, the Earl of Albright,
did not have a choice--it was either kill or be killed.
Still, some of the mourners privately argued (at the
public house, before the services commenced) that Albright
might have avoided the confrontation had he not asked
Rothembow to stop cheating. Not that anyone could dispute
that Rothembow's cheating was legion, or that Albright had
been a virtual saint of patience through the years. But he
might have thought twice before accusing his cousin before
a roomful of people.
That sentiment was met with the equally insistent one that
as Rothembow had been cheating so very blatantly, he had
obviously been asking to be called on it. A few tried to
put forth that Rothembow had been simply too drunk to know
what he was doing, particularly evidenced by his calling
Albright a coward. Of all men, the Earl of Albright was
the last one any of them would have called a coward, and
furthermore, they argued, what could Albright have done? A
man could hardly have his character challenged in the face
of so many peers and not avenge his honor. Not one of the
mourners could fault Albright for accepting Rothembow's
drunken challenge.
Not one of them could believe that either man had actually
gone through withit.
So it was the collective opinion of the mourners that no
matter how Rothembow and Albright came to be standing in
that yellow field, Albright had had no choice. And he had
done the honorable thing by deloping. Rothembow, who was
still staggering drunk that morning, had responded by
firing on him (a sin so great that the men shuddered each
time they recalled it) and missing badly. Yet that paled
in comparison to what Rothembow did next, and the mourners
were divided on the subject of Lord Fitzhugh's culpability.
Having recently obtained a fine double-barreled German
pistol inlaid with mother-of-pearl, Lord Fitzhugh had felt
compelled to wear it in his new leather holster for the
entire weekend in the event the party was set upon by
thieves or an otherwise marauding band of ne'er-do-wells.
So confident was he in his new pistol that he was in the
habit of draping his coat in a manner that clearly
displayed the firearm. Which was exactly how he was
wearing it when Rothembow grabbed it from its holster. He
had lunged for that pistol--primed for any event,
naturally--and had fired a second time at Albright,
clearly intending to kill him. Albright had to defend
himself, and most agreed it was a bloody miracle that he
was able to retrieve his own pistol and fire before his
cousin gunned him down with a third shot. Fitzhugh had
been the fool and Rothembow the coward--although one
mourner noted that the wild look in Rothembow's eyes
suggested he was perhaps more deranged than cowardly.
That, naturally, had prompted another round of debate as
to whether Rothembow had actually meant Albright to kill
him. It was hardly a secret among their set that Rothembow
was drowning in debt, having squandered his funds and his
life on excessive drink and Madam Farantino's women, and
was seemingly bent on self-destruction. That
notwithstanding, it was inconceivable to them that a man
might want to end his own life so desperately he would go
to such extraordinary measures. Inconceivable, but
apparently possible.
Now, at the gravesite, all of the mourners who had come to
witness the fantastic end to their hunting trip in the
country covertly watched Albright and his friends beneath
the brims of their hats as the vicar droned on.
"Know ye in this death the light of our Lord . . ."
The Rogues of Regent Street--Adrian Spence, Phillip
Rothembow, Arthur Christian, and Julian Dane--were the
idols of every man of the Quality. In fact, the final
argument that had risen over the din of the public house
was just how, exactly, the four childhood friends had come
by that moniker. None could really recall, but they agreed
the name had been earned honestly enough. The four had met
at Eton, earning themselves reputations as young
reprobates even then. But it was when their names started
to appear with alarming frequency in the Times a few years
ago that the name had stuck. The Rogues exhibited a
penchant for breaking the hearts of proper young
debutantes who strolled amid the Regent Street shops
during the day. Capable of charming the young ladies and
their mamas to the tips of their toes, they also were
ruthless in winning their dowries from their fathers in
the gaming clubs at night.
"Know ye the quality of love . . ."
That habit hardly endeared the four men to the Regent
Street set, and for the more conservative members, their
habit of openly frequenting the notorious Regent Street
boudoirs in the early hours of the morning was the most
egregious of their many sins.
"And the quality of life . . ."
Nonetheless, the Rogues were an enviable group who lived
by their own code and amassed great sums of wealth in
their various business ventures. They lived on the edge,
never fearing danger, never fearing the law, and flaunting
their disdain of society's expectations for titled young
men in the ton's collective face--exactly what every
mourner privately wished he had the courage to do. Until
today.
"And know ye the quality of mercy . . ."
Until the solemn pain on the faces of the surviving Rogues
suggested they had tasted their own mortality.
And the mourners had tasted their own.
"Amen."
Having seen what they had come to see, the mourners at
last began to drift away from the gravesite in search of
shelter from the threatening skies. Only five remained.
Two were gravediggers, working to fill the hole before the
rains came. The three surviving Rogues stood slightly
apart, seemingly oblivious to the light rain as they
stared blankly into the yawning grave.