A Will And A Way Read online




  A Will and a Way

  Nora Roberts

  www.millsandboon.com.au

  It was worse than winning the lottery—much worse. This bequest might mean more money, but the strings attached had Pandora McVie tied up in knots. Respecting Uncle Jolley’s last wishes meant spending time isolated in the Catskills with Michael Donahue, her least favorite—though best looking—distant relative and co-beneficiary.

  Living with a carrot-topped termagant wasn’t Michael’s idea of a good time, either, but he realized they were stuck. Jolley was a matchmaker to the end—and apparently for some time beyond. What could happen in six months? Michael answered that one himself: almost anything.

  For my family members, who, fortunately, aren’t as odd as the relatives in this book.

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter One

  One hundred fifty million dollars was nothing to sneeze at. No one in the vast, echoing library of Jolley’s Folley would have dared. Except Pandora. She did so with more enthusiasm than delicacy into a tattered tissue. After blowing her nose, she sat back, wishing the antihistamine she had taken would live up to its promise of fast relief. She wished she’d never caught the wretched cold in the first place. More, she wished she were anywhere else in the world.

  Surrounding her were dozens of books she’d read and hundreds more she’d never given a thought to, though she’d spent hours and hours in the library. The scent of the leather-bound volumes mixed with the lighter, homier scent of dust. Pandora preferred either to the strangling fragrance of lilies that filled three stocky vases.

  In one corner of the room was a marble-and-ivory chess set, where she’d lost a great many highly disputed matches. Uncle Jolley, bless his round, innocent face and pudgy fingers, had been a compulsive and skilled cheat. Pandora had never taken a loss in stride. Maybe that’s why he’d so loved to beat her, by fair means or foul.

  Through the three arching windows the light shone dull and a little gloomy. It suited her mood and, she thought, the proceedings. Uncle Jolley had loved to set scenes.

  When she loved—and she felt this emotion for a select few who’d touched her life—she put everything she had into it. She’d been born with boundless energy. She’d developed iron-jawed stubbornness. She’d loved Uncle Jolley in her uninhibited, expansive fashion, acknowledging then accepting all of his oddites. He might have been ninety-three, but he’d never been dull or fussy.

  A month before his death, they’d gone fishing—poaching actually—in the lake that was owned and stocked by his neighbor. When they’d caught more than they could eat, they’d sent a half-dozen trout back to the owner, cleaned and chilled.

  She was going to miss Uncle Jolley with his round cherub’s face, high, melodious voice and wicked humors. From his ten-foot, extravagantly framed portrait, he looked down at her with the same little smirk he’d worn whether he’d been making a million-dollar merger or handing an unsuspecting vice-president a drink in a dribble glass. She missed him already. No one else in her far-flung, contrasting family understood and accepted her with the same ease. It had been one more reason she’d adored him.

  Miserable with grief, aggravated by a head cold, Pandora listened to Edmund Fitzhugh drone on, and on, with the preliminary technicalities of Uncle Jolley’s will. Maximillian Jolley McVie had never been one for brevity. He’d always said if you were going to do something, do it until the steam ran out. His last will and testament bore his style.

  Not bothering to hide her disinterest in the proceedings, Pandora took a comprehensive survey of the other occupants of the library.

  To have called them mourners would have been just the sort of bad joke Jolley would have appreciated.

  There was Jolley’s only surviving son, Uncle Carlson, and his wife. What was her name? Lona—Mona? Did it matter? Pandora saw them sitting stiff backed and alert in matching shades of black. They made her think of crows on a telephone wire just waiting for something to fall at their feet.

  Cousin Ginger—sweet and pretty and harmless, if rather vacuous. Her hair was Jean Harlow blond this month. Good old Cousin Biff was there in his black Brooks Brothers suit. He sat back, one leg crossed over the other as if he were watching a polo match. Pandora was certain he wasn’t missing a word. His wife—was it Laurie?—had a prim, respectful look on her face. From experience, Pandora knew she wouldn’t utter a word unless it were to echo Biff. Uncle Jolley had called her a silly, boring fool. Hating to be cynical, Pandora had to agree.

  There was Uncle Monroe looking plump and successful and smoking a big cigar despite the fact that his sister, Patience, waved a little white handkerchief in front of her nose. Probably because of it, Pandora corrected. Uncle Monroe liked nothing better than to make his ineffectual sister uncomfortable.

  Cousin Hank looked macho and muscular, but hardly more than his tough athletic wife, Meg. They’d hiked the Appalachian Trail on their honeymoon. Uncle Jolley had wondered if they stretched and limbered up before lovemaking.

  The thought caused Pandora to giggle. She stifled it halfheartedly with the tissue just before her gaze wandered over to cousin Michael. Or was it second cousin Michael? She’d never been able to get the technical business straight. It seemed a bit foolish when you weren’t talking blood relation anyway. His mother had been Uncle Jolley’s niece by Jolley’s son’s second marriage. It was a complicated state of affairs, Pandora thought. But then Michael Donahue was a complicated man.

  They’d never gotten along, though she knew Uncle Jolley had favored him. As far as Pandora was concerned, anyone who made his living writing a silly television series that kept people glued to a box rather than doing something worthwhile was a materialistic parasite. She had a momentary flash of pleasure as she remembered telling him just that.

  Then, of course, there were the women. When a man dated centerfolds and showgirls it was obvious he wasn’t interested in intellectual stimulation. Pandora smiled as she recalled stating her view quite clearly the last time Michael had visited Jolley’s Folley. Uncle Jolley had nearly fallen off his chair laughing.

  Then her smile faded. Uncle Jolley was gone. And if she was honest, which she was often, she’d admit that of all the people in the room at that moment, Michael Donahue had cared for and enjoyed the old man more than anyone but herself.

  You’d hardly know that to look at him now, she mused. He looked disinterested and slightly arrogant. She noticed the set, grim line around his lips. Pandora had always considered Donahue’s mouth his best feature, though he rarely smiled at her unless it was to bare his teeth and snarl.

  Uncle Jolley had liked his looks, and had told Pandora so in his early stages of matchmaking. A hobby she’d made sure he’d given up quickly. Well, he hadn’t given it up precisely, but she’d ignored it all the same.

  Being rather short and round himself, perhaps Jolley had appreciated Donahue’s long lean frame, and the narrow intense face. Pandora might have liked it herself, except that Michael’s eyes were often distant and detached.

  At the moment he looked like one of the heroes in the action series he wrote—leaning negligently against the wall and looking just a bit out of place in the tidy suit and tie. His dark hair was casual and not altogether neat, as though he hadn’t thought to comb it into place after riding with the top down. He looked bored and ready for action. Any action.

  It was too bad, Pandora thought, that they didn’t get alo
ng better. She’d have liked to have reminisced with someone about Uncle Jolley, someone who appreciated his whimsies as she had.

  There was no use thinking along those lines. If they’d elected to sit together, they’d have been picking little pieces out of each other by now. Uncle Jolley, smirking down from his portrait, knew it very well.

  With a half sigh she blew her nose again and tried to listen to Fitzhugh. There was something about a bequest to whales. Or maybe it was whalers.

  Another hour of this, Michael thought, and he’d be ready to chew raw meat. If he heard one more whereas… On a long breath, Michael drew himself in. He was here for the duration because he’d loved the crazy old man. If the last thing he could do for Jolley was to stand in a room with a group of human vultures and listen to long rambling legalese, then he’d do it. Once it was over, he’d pour himself a long shot of brandy and toast the old man in private. Jolley had had a fondness for brandy.

  When Michael had been young and full of imagination and his parents hadn’t understood, Uncle Jolley had listened to him ramble, encouraged him to dream. Invariably on a visit to the Folley, his uncle had demanded a story then had settled himself back, bright-eyed and eager, while Michael wove on. Michael hadn’t forgotten.

  When he’d received his first Emmy for Logan’s Run, Michael had flown from L.A. to the Catskills and had given the statuette to his uncle. The Emmy was still in the old man’s bedroom, even if the old man wasn’t.

  Michael listened to the dry impersonal attorney’s voice and wished for a cigarette. He’d only given them up two days before. Two days, four hours and thirty-five minutes. He’d have welcomed the raw meat.

  He felt stifled in the room with all these people. Every one of them had thought old Jolley was half-mad and a bit of a nuisance. The one hundred fifty-million-dollar estate was different. Stocks and bonds were extremely sane. Michael had seen several assessing glances roaming over the library furniture. Big, ornate Georgian might not suit some of the streamlined life-styles, but it would liquidate into very tidy cash. The old man, Michael knew, had loved every clunky chair and oversize table in the house.

  He doubted if any of them had been to the big echoing house in the past ten years. Except for Pandora, he admitted grudgingly. She might be an annoyance, but she’d adored Jolley.

  At the moment she looked miserable. Michael didn’t believe he’d ever seen her look unhappy before—furious, disdainful, infuriating, but never unhappy. If he hadn’t known better, he’d have gone to sit beside her, offer some comfort, hold her hand. She’d probably chomp it off at the wrist.

  Still, her shockingly blue eyes were red and puffy. Almost as red as her hair, he mused, as his gaze skimmed over the wild curly mane that tumbled, with little attention to discipline or style, around her shoulders. She was so pale that the sprinkling of freckles over her nose stood out. Normally her ivory-toned skin had a hint of rose in it—health or temperament, he’d never been sure.

  Sitting among her solemn, black-clad family, she stood out like a parrot among crows. She’d worn a vivid blue dress. Michael approved of it, though he’d never say so to Pandora. She didn’t need black and crepe and lilies to mourn. That he understood, if he didn’t understand her.

  She annoyed him, periodically, with her views on his life-style and career. When they clashed, it didn’t take long for him to hurl criticism back at her. After all, she was a bright, talented woman who was content to play around making outrageous jewelry for boutiques rather than taking advantage of her Master’s degree in education.

  She called him materialistic, he called her idealistic. She labeled him a chauvinist, he labeled her a pseudo-intellectual. Jolley had sat with his hands folded and chuckled every time they argued. Now that he was gone, Michael mused, there wouldn’t be an opportunity for any more battles. Oddly enough, he found it another reason to miss his uncle.

  The truth was, he’d never felt any strong family ties to anyone but Jolley. Michael didn’t think of his parents very often. His father was somewhere in Europe with his fourth wife, and his mother had settled placidly into Palm Springs society with husband number three. They’d never understood their son who’d opted to work for a living in something as bourgeois as television.

  But Jolley had understood and appreciated. More, much more important to Michael, he’d enjoyed Michael’s work.

  A grin spread over his face when he heard Fitzhugh drone out the bequest for whales. It was so typically Jolley. Several impatient relations hissed through their teeth. A hundred fifty thousand dollars had just spun out of their reach. Michael glanced up at the larger-than-life-size portrait of his uncle. You always said you’d have the last word, you old fool. The only trouble is you’re not here to laugh about it.

  “To my son, Carlson…” All the quiet muttering and whispers died as Fitzhugh cleared his throat. Without much interest Pandora watched her relatives come to attention. The charities and servants had their bequests. Now it was time for the big guns. Fitzhugh glanced up briefly before he continued. “Whose—aaah—mediocrity was always a mystery to me, I leave my entire collection of magic tricks in hopes he can develop a sense of the ridiculous.”

  Pandora choked into her tissue and watched her uncle turn beet red. First point Uncle Jolley, she thought and prepared to enjoy herself. Maybe he’d left the whole business to the A.S.P.C.A.

  “To my grandson, Bradley, and my granddaughter by marriage, Lorraine, I leave my very best wishes. They need nothing more.”

  Pandora swallowed and blinked back tears at the reference to her parents. She’d call them in Zanzibar that evening. They would appreciate the sentiment even as she did.

  “To my nephew Monroe who has the first dollar he ever made, I leave the last dollar I made, frame included. To my niece, Patience, I leave my cottage in Key West without much hope she’ll have the gumption to use it.”

  Monroe chomped on his cigar while Patience looked horrified.

  “To my grand-nephew, Biff, I leave my collection of matches, with the hopes that he will, at last, set the world on fire. To my pretty grand-niece, Ginger, who likes equally pretty things, I leave the sterling silver mirror purported to have been owned by Marie Antoinette. To my grand-nephew, Hank, I leave the sum of 3528. Enough, I believe, for a lifetime supply of wheat germ.”

  The grumbles that had begun with the first bequest continued and grew. Anger hovered on the edge of outrage. Jolley would have liked nothing better. Pandora made the mistake of glancing over at Michael. He didn’t seem so distant and detached now, but full of admiration. When their gazes met, the giggle she’d been holding back spilled out. It earned her several glares.

  Carlson rose, giving new meaning to the phrase controlled outrage. “Mr. Fitzhugh, my father’s will is nothing more than a mockery. It’s quite obvious that he wasn’t in his right mind when he made it, nor do I have any doubt that a court will overturn it.”

  “Mr. McVie.” Again Fitzhugh cleared his throat. The sun began to push its way through the clouds but no one seemed to notice. “I understand perfectly your sentiments in this matter. However, my client was perfectly well and lucid when this will was drawn. He may have worded it against my advice, but it is legal and binding. You are, of course, free to consult with your own counsel. Meanwhile, there’s more to be read.”

  “Hogwash.” Monroe puffed on his cigar and glared at everyone. “Hogwash,” he repeated while Patience patted his arm and chirped ineffectually.

  “Uncle Jolley liked hogwash,” Pandora said as she balled her tissue. She was ready to face them down, almost hoped she’d have to. It would take her mind off her grief. “If he wanted to leave his money to the Society for the Prevention of Stupidity, it was his right.”

  “Easily said, my dear.” Biff polished his nails on his lapel. The gold band of his watch caught a bit of the sun and gleamed. “Perhaps the old lunatic left you a ball of twine so you can string more beads.”

  “You haven’t got the matches yet, old boy.” Mi
chael spoke lazily from his corner, but every eye turned his way. “Careful what you light.”

  “Let him read, why don’t you?” Ginger piped up, quite pleased with her bequest. Marie Antoinette, she mused. Just imagine.

  “The last two bequests are joint,” Fitzhugh began before there could be another interruption. “And, a bit unorthodox.”

  “The entire document’s unorthodox,” Carlson tossed out, then harrumphed. Several heads nodded in agreement.

  Pandora remembered why she always avoided family gatherings. They bored her to death. Quite deliberately, she waved a hand in front of her mouth and yawned. “Could we have the rest, Mr. Fitzhugh, before my family embarrasses themselves any further?”

  She thought, but couldn’t be sure, that she saw a quick light of approval in the fusty attorney’s eyes. “Mr. McVie wrote this portion in his own words.” He paused a moment, either for effect or courage. “To Pandora McVie and Michael Donahue,” Fitzhugh read. “The two members of my family who have given me the most pleasure with their outlook on life, their enjoyment of an old man and old jokes, I leave the rest of my estate, in entirety, all accounts, all business interests, all stocks, bonds and trusts, all real and personal property, with all affection. Share and share alike.”

  Pandora didn’t hear the half-dozen objections that sprang out. She rose, stunned and infuriated. “I can’t take his money.” Towering over the family who sat around her, she strode straight up to Fitzhugh. The lawyer, who’d anticipated attacks from other areas, braced for the unexpected. “I wouldn’t know what to do with it. It’d just clutter up my life.” She waved a hand at the papers on the desk as if they were a minor annoyance. “He should’ve asked me first.”

  “Miss McVie…”

 

    A Little Magic Read onlineA Little MagicVision in White Read onlineVision in WhiteTrue Betrayals Read onlineTrue BetrayalsThe Next Always Read onlineThe Next AlwaysA Man for Amanda Read onlineA Man for AmandaBorn in Fire Read onlineBorn in FireTribute Read onlineTributeNight Moves Read onlineNight MovesDance Upon the Air Read onlineDance Upon the AirThe Name of the Game Read onlineThe Name of the GameJewels of the Sun Read onlineJewels of the SunRiver's End Read onlineRiver's EndPublic Secrets Read onlinePublic SecretsHomeport Read onlineHomeportPrivate Scandals Read onlinePrivate ScandalsThe Witness Read onlineThe WitnessBlithe Images Read onlineBlithe ImagesHidden Riches Read onlineHidden RichesKey of Light Read onlineKey of LightDivine Evil Read onlineDivine EvilHigh Noon Read onlineHigh NoonBlue Dahlia Read onlineBlue DahliaSea Swept Read onlineSea SweptThis Magic Moment Read onlineThis Magic MomentYear One Read onlineYear OneA Little Fate Read onlineA Little FateHonest Illusions Read onlineHonest IllusionsThe Reef Read onlineThe ReefShelter in Place Read onlineShelter in PlaceThe Hollow Read onlineThe HollowHolding the Dream Read onlineHolding the DreamThe Pagan Stone Read onlineThe Pagan StoneSavour the Moment Read onlineSavour the MomentThe Perfect Hope Read onlineThe Perfect HopeIsland of Glass Read onlineIsland of GlassHappy Ever After Read onlineHappy Ever AfterBed of Roses Read onlineBed of RosesStars of Fortune Read onlineStars of FortuneDark Witch Read onlineDark WitchThe Return of Rafe MacKade Read onlineThe Return of Rafe MacKadeChesapeake Blue Read onlineChesapeake BlueThe Perfect Neighbor Read onlineThe Perfect NeighborThe Collector Read onlineThe CollectorCome Sundown Read onlineCome SundownRebellion Read onlineRebellionAffaire Royale Read onlineAffaire RoyaleDaring to Dream Read onlineDaring to DreamBay of Sighs Read onlineBay of SighsBlood Magick Read onlineBlood MagickAngels Fall Read onlineAngels FallCaptivated Read onlineCaptivatedThe Last Boyfriend Read onlineThe Last BoyfriendIrish Thoroughbred Read onlineIrish ThoroughbredInner Harbor Read onlineInner HarborThe Right Path Read onlineThe Right PathNight Shadow Read onlineNight ShadowThe Heart of Devin MacKade Read onlineThe Heart of Devin MacKadeShadow Spell Read onlineShadow SpellThe Playboy Prince Read onlineThe Playboy PrinceThe Fall of Shane MacKade Read onlineThe Fall of Shane MacKadeRising Tides Read onlineRising TidesCommand Performance Read onlineCommand PerformanceHidden Star Read onlineHidden StarCordina's Crown Jewel Read onlineCordina's Crown JewelThe MacGregor Brides Read onlineThe MacGregor BridesThe Pride of Jared MacKade Read onlineThe Pride of Jared MacKadeBorn in Ice Read onlineBorn in IceWhiskey Beach Read onlineWhiskey BeachThe Last Honest Woman Read onlineThe Last Honest WomanNight Shield Read onlineNight ShieldBorn in Shame Read onlineBorn in ShameSecret Star Read onlineSecret StarTempting Fate Read onlineTempting FateNightshade Read onlineNightshadeThe Obsession Read onlineThe ObsessionNight Shift Read onlineNight ShiftPlaying The Odds Read onlinePlaying The OddsTears of the Moon Read onlineTears of the MoonOne Man's Art Read onlineOne Man's ArtThe MacGregor Groom Read onlineThe MacGregor GroomIrish Rebel Read onlineIrish RebelMorrigan's Cross Read onlineMorrigan's CrossIn From The Cold Read onlineIn From The ColdNight Smoke Read onlineNight SmokeFinding the Dream Read onlineFinding the DreamRed Lily Read onlineRed LilyThe Liar Read onlineThe LiarMontana Sky Read onlineMontana SkyHeart of the Sea Read onlineHeart of the SeaAll The Possibilities Read onlineAll The PossibilitiesCarolina Moon Read onlineCarolina MoonOpposites Attract Read onlineOpposites AttractCaptive Star Read onlineCaptive StarThe Winning Hand Read onlineThe Winning HandKey of Valor Read onlineKey of ValorCourting Catherine Read onlineCourting CatherineHeaven and Earth Read onlineHeaven and EarthFace the Fire Read onlineFace the FireUntamed Read onlineUntamedSkin Deep Read onlineSkin DeepEnchanted Read onlineEnchantedSong of the West Read onlineSong of the WestSuzanna's Surrender Read onlineSuzanna's SurrenderEntranced Read onlineEntrancedDance of the Gods Read onlineDance of the GodsKey of Knowledge Read onlineKey of KnowledgeCharmed Read onlineCharmedFor Now, Forever Read onlineFor Now, ForeverBlood Brothers Read onlineBlood BrothersSweet Revenge Read onlineSweet RevengeThree Fates Read onlineThree FatesMind Over Matter Read onlineMind Over MatterMegan's Mate Read onlineMegan's MateValley of Silence Read onlineValley of SilenceWithout A Trace Read onlineWithout A TraceThe Law is a Lady Read onlineThe Law is a LadyTemptation Read onlineTemptationDance to the Piper Read onlineDance to the PiperBlue Smoke Read onlineBlue SmokeBlack Hills Read onlineBlack HillsThe Heart's Victory Read onlineThe Heart's VictorySullivan's Woman Read onlineSullivan's WomanGenuine Lies Read onlineGenuine LiesFor the Love of Lilah Read onlineFor the Love of LilahGabriel's Angel Read onlineGabriel's AngelIrish Rose Read onlineIrish RoseHot Ice Read onlineHot IceDual Image Read onlineDual ImageLawless Read onlineLawlessCatch My Heart Read onlineCatch My HeartBirthright Read onlineBirthrightFirst Impressions Read onlineFirst ImpressionsChasing Fire Read onlineChasing FireCarnal Innocence Read onlineCarnal InnocenceBest Laid Plans Read onlineBest Laid PlansThe Villa Read onlineThe VillaNorthern Lights Read onlineNorthern LightsLocal Hero Read onlineLocal HeroThe Search Read onlineThe SearchIsland of Flowers Read onlineIsland of FlowersThe Welcoming Read onlineThe WelcomingAll I Want for Christmas Read onlineAll I Want for ChristmasBlack Rose Read onlineBlack RoseHot Rocks Read onlineHot RocksMidnight Bayou Read onlineMidnight BayouThe Art of Deception Read onlineThe Art of DeceptionFrom This Day Read onlineFrom This DayLess of a Stranger Read onlineLess of a StrangerPartners Read onlinePartnersStorm Warning Read onlineStorm WarningOnce More With Feeling Read onlineOnce More With FeelingHer Mother's Keeper Read onlineHer Mother's KeeperSacred Sins Read onlineSacred SinsRules of the Game Read onlineRules of the GameSanctuary Read onlineSanctuaryUnfinished Business Read onlineUnfinished BusinessCordina's Royal Family Collection Read onlineCordina's Royal Family CollectionDangerous Embrace Read onlineDangerous EmbraceOne Summer Read onlineOne SummerThe Best Mistake Read onlineThe Best MistakeBoundary Lines Read onlineBoundary LinesUnder Currents Read onlineUnder CurrentsThe Stanislaski Series Collection, Volume 1 Read onlineThe Stanislaski Series Collection, Volume 1The Rise of Magicks Read onlineThe Rise of MagicksThe Rise of Magicks (Chronicles of The One) Read onlineThe Rise of Magicks (Chronicles of The One)The Awakening: The Dragon Heart Legacy Book 1 Read onlineThe Awakening: The Dragon Heart Legacy Book 1Dance of Dreams Read onlineDance of DreamsSkin Deep: The O'Hurleys Read onlineSkin Deep: The O'HurleysThe Quinn Legacy: Inner Harbor ; Chesapeake Blue Read onlineThe Quinn Legacy: Inner Harbor ; Chesapeake Blue[Chronicles of the One 03.0] The Rise of Magicks Read online[Chronicles of the One 03.0] The Rise of MagicksTimes Change Read onlineTimes ChangeDance to the Piper: The O'Hurleys Read onlineDance to the Piper: The O'HurleysChristmas In the Snow: Taming Natasha / Considering Kate Read onlineChristmas In the Snow: Taming Natasha / Considering KateWaiting for Nick Read onlineWaiting for NickSummer Desserts Read onlineSummer DessertsDream 2 - Holding the Dream Read onlineDream 2 - Holding the DreamThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 2 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 2In the Garden Trilogy Read onlineIn the Garden TrilogyEight Classic Nora Roberts Romantic Suspense Novels Read onlineEight Classic Nora Roberts Romantic Suspense NovelsBest Laid Plans jh-2 Read onlineBest Laid Plans jh-2From the Heart Read onlineFrom the HeartHoliday Wishes Read onlineHoliday WishesDream 1 - Daring to Dream Read onlineDream 1 - Daring to DreamSecond Nature Read onlineSecond NatureSummer Pleasures Read onlineSummer PleasuresOnce Upon a Castle Read onlineOnce Upon a CastleStars of Mithra Box Set: Captive StarHidden StarSecret Star Read onlineStars of Mithra Box Set: Captive StarHidden StarSecret StarImpulse Read onlineImpulseThe Irish Trilogy by Nora Roberts Read onlineThe Irish Trilogy by Nora RobertsThe Pride Of Jared Mackade tmb-2 Read onlineThe Pride Of Jared Mackade tmb-2Lawless jh-3 Read onlineLawless jh-3Taming Natasha Read onlineTaming NatashaEndless Summer Read onlineEndless SummerBride Quartet Collection Read onlineBride Quartet CollectionHappy Ever After tbq-4 Read onlineHappy Ever After tbq-4Heart Of The Sea goa-3 Read onlineHeart Of The Sea goa-3Search for Love Read onlineSearch for LoveOnce upon a Dream Read onlineOnce upon a DreamOnce Upon a Star Read onlineOnce Upon a StarDream Trilogy Read onlineDream TrilogyRisky Business Read onlineRisky BusinessThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 3 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 3Dream 3 - Finding the Dream Read onlineDream 3 - Finding the DreamPromises in Death id-34 Read onlinePromises in Death id-34The Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 4 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 4The Perfect Hope ib-3 Read onlineThe Perfect Hope ib-3Less than a Stranger Read onlineLess than a StrangerSavour the Moment: Now the Big Day Has Finally Arrived, It's Time To... Read onlineSavour the Moment: Now the Big Day Has Finally Arrived, It's Time To...Convincing Alex Read onlineConvincing AlexBed of Roses tbq-2 Read onlineBed of Roses tbq-2Savour the Moment tbq-3 Read onlineSavour the Moment tbq-3Lessons Learned Read onlineLessons LearnedKey Of Valor k-3 Read onlineKey Of Valor k-3Red lily gt-3 Read onlineRed lily gt-3Savor the Moment Read onlineSavor the MomentThe Return Of Rafe Mackade tmb-1 Read onlineThe Return Of Rafe Mackade tmb-1For The Love Of Lilah tcw-3 Read onlineFor The Love Of Lilah tcw-3Black Rose gt-2 Read onlineBlack Rose gt-2Novels: The Law is a Lady Read onlineNovels: The Law is a LadyChesapeake Bay Saga 1-4 Read onlineChesapeake Bay Saga 1-4Considering Kate Read onlineConsidering KateMoon Shadows Read onlineMoon ShadowsKey of Knowledge k-2 Read onlineKey of Knowledge k-2The Sign of Seven Trilogy Read onlineThe Sign of Seven TrilogyOnce Upon a Kiss Read onlineOnce Upon a KissThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 5 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 5Suzanna's Surrender tcw-4 Read onlineSuzanna's Surrender tcw-4The Quinn Brothers Read onlineThe Quinn BrothersFalling for Rachel Read onlineFalling for RachelBrazen Virtue Read onlineBrazen VirtueTime Was Read onlineTime WasThe Gallaghers of Ardmore Trilogy Read onlineThe Gallaghers of Ardmore TrilogyMegan's Mate tcw-5 Read onlineMegan's Mate tcw-5Loving Jack jh-1 Read onlineLoving Jack jh-1Rebellion & In From The Cold Read onlineRebellion & In From The ColdBlue Dahlia gt-1 Read onlineBlue Dahlia gt-1The MacGregor Grooms Read onlineThe MacGregor GroomsThe Next Always tibt-1 Read onlineThe Next Always tibt-1The Heart Of Devin Mackade tmb-3 Read onlineThe Heart Of Devin Mackade tmb-3The Novels of Nora Roberts Volume 1 Read onlineThe Novels of Nora Roberts Volume 1Treasures Lost, Treasures Found Read onlineTreasures Lost, Treasures FoundNora Roberts's Circle Trilogy Read onlineNora Roberts's Circle TrilogyThe Key Trilogy Read onlineThe Key TrilogyThe Fall Of Shane Mackade tmb-4 Read onlineThe Fall Of Shane Mackade tmb-4A Will And A Way Read onlineA Will And A WayJewels of the Sun goa-1 Read onlineJewels of the Sun goa-1Luring a Lady Read onlineLuring a Lady