Aghast, she makes every possible attempt to escape, but Alex is always one step ahead of her. It is only through their journey to their "marital home" that Catherine discovers that Raefer Montgomery is actually Alexander Cameron, a Scottish Jacobite who has assumed the identity of a merchant to spy on the English. This doesn't sit well with either party, but they have no choice but to oblige. She succeeds with her scheme - so much so that Hamilton challenges Raefer to a duel. When she meets a tall, dark and handsome stranger with gorgeous dark eyes and a mysterious countenance, she decides to make her suitor jealous by flirting with the strange man, a successful merchant by the name of Mr. Catherine Augustine Ashbrooke, a young English debutante, has one thing in her mind: to marry Hamilton Garner, a lieutenant for the dragoons. Full of history, adventure and sensual romance, The Pride of Lions is indeed a treasure. The moment I extracted the book, dusted it off (shamefully admitting that my TBR pile is not only huge, but some of the books have gathered dust as well) and began to read, I knew I had a special book in my hands. The Canham novel sank somewhere in the heap of my TBR pile, never to be opened. I especially loved the Jacobite history, and was so voracious for a historical novel set during that same conflicting period between England and Scotland that I bought Marsha Canham's The Pride of Lions. Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series made a big impression on me.
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