New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Karen Ranney tells the story of a man and woman, each lonely and trapped in a role that had become suffocating.
Richard Strathmore, Duke of Lancaster, was the darling of the paparazzi, especially on the anniversary of his wife's death. With his children, Richard escaped to an isolated island off the Texas coast to find some peace from the incessant scrutiny.
Maggie Carlisle was tired of being cosseted because of her new blindness. She knew that if she didn't break free, she'd never be independent again. She tested her resolve by going to Gull Island, to a cottage owned by her aunt, only to discover that the British had landed.
Richard and Maggie each found in the other a way to be a different person for awhile. Attraction, however, had to be put aside for duty, and then survival, as Richard was suddenly the target of an unlikely Scottish radical willing to trade Scottish independence for a British duke.
Stretching from Texas, to England, to Scotland, The Eyes of Love is the story of a love that shouldn't have been, and a terror that was only too real.
Richard Strathmore, Duke of Lancaster, was the darling of the paparazzi, especially on the anniversary of his wife's death. With his children, Richard escaped to an isolated island off the Texas coast to find some peace from the incessant scrutiny.
Maggie Carlisle was tired of being cosseted because of her new blindness. She knew that if she didn't break free, she'd never be independent again. She tested her resolve by going to Gull Island, to a cottage owned by her aunt, only to discover that the British had landed.
Richard and Maggie each found in the other a way to be a different person for awhile. Attraction, however, had to be put aside for duty, and then survival, as Richard was suddenly the target of an unlikely Scottish radical willing to trade Scottish independence for a British duke.
Stretching from Texas, to England, to Scotland, The Eyes of Love is the story of a love that shouldn't have been, and a terror that was only too real.