$6.99
Our Reader™ software is required to purchase and download eBooks. Download it here.Click here to purchase this book!
The price of this eBook was set by Hachette Book Group USA
The Leopard Prince
Overview
THE ONE THING A LADY MUST NEVER DO
Wealthy Lady Georgina Maitland doesn't want a husband, though she could use a good steward to run her estates. One look at Harry Pye, and Georgina knows she's not just dealing with a servant, but a man.
IS FALL IN LOVE...
Harry has known many aristocrats-including one particular nobleman who is his sworn enemy. But Harry has never met a beautiful lady so independent, uninhibited, and eager to be in his arms.
WITH HER SERVANT.
Still, it's impossible to conduct a discreet liaison when poisoned sheep, murdered villagers, and an enraged magistrate have the county in an uproar. The locals blame Harry for everything. Soon it's all Georgina can do to keep her head above water and Harry's out of the noose...without missing another night of love.
THE LEOPARD PRINCE
Author Information
Customer Reviews
Showing 1-10 of the 10 most recent reviews
-
1.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted August 02, 2011 by , The United States
-
2.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted February 19, 2011 by , Bogor, 16968, Indonesia
-
3.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted February 15, 2011 by , Nashville, TN
-
4.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted February 13, 2011 by , Rome, Italy
-
5.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted January 31, 2011 by , Canada
-
6.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted November 30, 2010 by , Paris, France
-
7.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted September 27, 2010 by , Chicago, IL
-
8.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted September 25, 2010 by , Montevideo, 10, Uruguay
-
9.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted September 18, 2010 by , Istanbul, Turkey
-
10.
Review from
is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're readingPosted May 15, 2010 by , Barendrecht, Netherlands
-
- 1
-

-
- 1
-

Product Details
-
Published by
Forever
-
Publish Date
March 31, 2007
-
Print ISBN
0446618489
-
eBook ISBN
9780446194617
-
Imprint
Forever
-
Filesize
782.73 KB
-
Number of Print Pages*
384
* Number of eBook pages may differ. Click here for more information.
Excerpt from The Leopard Prince by Elizabeth Hoyt
Chapter One
YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SEPTEMBER 1760
After the carriage wreck and a bit before the horses ran away, Lady Georgina Maitland noticed that her land steward was a man. Well, that is to say, naturally she knew Harry Pye was a man. She wasn't under the delusion that he was a lion or an elephant or a whale, or indeed any other member of the animal kingdom--if one could call a whale an animal and not just a very big fish. What she meant was that his maleness had suddenly become very evident.
George knit her brow as she stood in the desolate high road leading to East Riding in Yorkshire. Around them, the gorse-covered hills rolled away into the gray horizon. Dark was rapidly falling, brought on early by the rainstorm. They could've been standing at the ends of the earth.
"Do you consider a whale to be an animal or a very big fish, Mr. Pye?" she shouted into the wind.
Harry Pye's shoulders bunched. They were covered only by a wet lawn shirt that clung to him in an aesthetically pleasing way. He'd previously discarded his coat and waistcoat to help John Coachman unhitch the horses from the overturned carriage.
"An animal, my lady." Mr. Pye's voice was, as always, even and deep with a sort of gravelly tone toward the bottom.
George had never heard him raise his voice or show passion in any way. Not when she'd insisted on accompanying him to her Yorkshire estate; not when the rain had started, slowing their travel to a crawl; not when the carriage had overturned twenty minutes ago.
How very irritating. "Do you think you will be able to right the carriage?" She pulled her soaked cloak up over her chin as she contemplated the remains of her vehicle. The door hung from one hinge, banging in the wind, two wheels were smashed, and the back axle had settled at an odd angle. It was a thoroughly idiotic question.
Mr. Pye didn't indicate by action or word that he was aware of the silliness of her query. "No, my lady."
George sighed.
Really, it was something of a miracle that they and the coachman hadn't been hurt or killed. The rain had made the roads slippery with mud, and as they had rounded the last curve, the carriage had started to slide. From inside, she and Mr. Pye had heard the coachman shouting as he tried to steady the vehicle. Harry Pye had leapt from his seat to hers, rather like a large cat. He'd braced himself against her before she could even utter a word. His warmth had surrounded her, and her nose, buried intimately in his shirt, had inhaled the scent of clean linen and male skin. By that time, the carriage had tilted, and it was obvious they were falling into the ditch.
Slowly, awfully, the contraption had tipped over with a grinding crash. The horses had whinnied from the front, and the carriage had moaned as if protesting its fate. She'd clutched Mr. Pye's coat as her world upended, and Mr. Pye grunted in pain. Then they were still again. The vehicle had rested on its side, and Mr. Pye rested on her like a great warm blanket. Except Harry Pye was much firmer than any blanket she'd ever felt before.
He'd apologized most correctly, disentangled himself from her, and climbed up the seat to wrest open the door above them. He'd crawled through and then bodily pulled her out. George rubbed the wrist he'd gripped. He was disconcertingly strong--one would never know it to look at him. At one point, almost her entire weight had hung from his arm and she wasn't a petite woman.
The coachman gave a shout, which was snatched away by the wind, but it was enough to bring her back to the present. The mare he'd been unhitching was free.
"Ride her to the next town, Mr. Coachman, if you will," Harry Pye directed. "See if there is another carriage to send back. I'll remain here with her ladyship."
The coachman mounted the horse and waved before disappearing into the downpour.






is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading






