![]() Linden finds out from her father that Joss is actually married, and she’s nearly mad with grief. He waded out of the stream and Linden raised her limp head to meet his hard mouth, her lips filled with a sensuality which turned them both to fire as he carried her into the secret green cave beneath the overhanging willows. Joss made a wild, smothered sound, staring down into her face, then his hands slid under her and lifted her. “I love you,” she cried, her fingers restlessly touching his dark head, and it was not merely the first time she had said it, it was the first time she had known it, and all the miracle of her understanding was in her shivering voice. She was deaf to all reason, her small face blind with aroused need, the slender naked body on flame. ![]() “Linden darling, we’ve got to get out of here.” He pulled away abruptly, trembling, breathing like a drowning man, and his hands went to unclasp her hands from his neck. On the last night, despite trying to control himself due to her age, he ends up making love to her under a willow tree (it’s a fade-to-black, sadly!) He stays with them for a few days, during which time he falls hopelessly in love with Linden. Joss White crashes his car near the remote Yorkshire home of Linden and her eccentric artist father. ![]() ![]() It is a wonderfully sweet, absolutely forbidden love at first sight, between Linden (17) and Joss (39). This is an absolutely incredible romance, possibly the best Mills & Boon/Harlequin I have ever read. ![]()
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