Milady in love / by M.C. Beaton writing as Marion Chesney.

By: Chesney, Marion [author.]Contributor(s): Dore, Charlotte Anne [narrator.]Material type: SoundSoundPublisher number: ZM9371 | Blackstone AudioSeries: Chesney, Marion. Royal series ; bk. 23.Publisher: [Ashland, Or.] : Blackstone Audio, [2015]Copyright date: ©1987Copyright date: ℗2015Edition: UnabridgedDescription: 1 MP3 CD (approximately 5 hr.) : digital ; 12 cmContent type: spoken word Media type: audio Carrier type: audiodiscISBN: 9781481512596Subject(s): Bachelors -- England -- Fiction | Nobility -- Fiction | Guardian and ward -- Fiction | Man-woman relationships -- Fiction | England -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- FictionGenre/Form: Regency fiction. | Love stories. | Audiobooks. DDC classification: 823/.914 Read by Charlotte Anne Dore.Summary: Just when he'd fobbed off the last brat, another appeared to take her place! Poor Lord Anselm! The dashing bachelor was forever plagued with dying relatives leaving their female children to his care. Indeed, he had squired so many a silly miss from schoolroom to marriage mart that he had sworn off women altogether. The current ward was far and away the worst. Cheeky as only a French girl could be, Yvonne de la Falaise had surely sent her papa to an early grave with her melodramatics and mischief. Thank goodness for her governess, Patricia Cottingham, who was so calm and competent. But all was not as it seemed, or so Anselm learned, and very nearly too late.
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Blackstone Audio. ZM9371.

Requires the use of an MP3 enabled CD player or computer.

Just when he'd fobbed off the last brat, another appeared to take her place! Poor Lord Anselm! The dashing bachelor was forever plagued with dying relatives leaving their female children to his care. Indeed, he had squired so many a silly miss from schoolroom to marriage mart that he had sworn off women altogether. The current ward was far and away the worst. Cheeky as only a French girl could be, Yvonne de la Falaise had surely sent her papa to an early grave with her melodramatics and mischief. Thank goodness for her governess, Patricia Cottingham, who was so calm and competent. But all was not as it seemed, or so Anselm learned, and very nearly too late.

Read by Charlotte Anne Dore.

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