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Cover of Hawk's Way

a novel ·

Hawk's Way

by

Cowboy and the princess: Faron Whitelaw had some nerve calling Belinda Prescott a princess. A nearly bankrupt ranch was hardly a castle, and Faron, an ill-tempered cowboy who?d inherited half her kingdom, was certainly no prince. Faron became spitting mad …

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  • ● literary fiction, romance

the long version

Cowboy and the princess: Faron Whitelaw had some nerve calling Belinda Prescott a princess. A nearly bankrupt ranch was hardly a castle, and Faron, an ill-tempered cowboy who?d inherited half her kingdom, was certainly no prince. Faron became spitting mad when Belinda informed him about the truth of his parentage: he wasn?t one of the Whitelaws of Texas. He wanted to believe that she was nothing more than a gold digger, but all she seemed to want was him? / Wrangler and the rich girl: Garth Whitelaw couldn?t understand why a rich Texas debutante like Candy Baylor would want to train horses. But she looked darn sexy in worn out jeans with hay in her hair, so who was he to judge? Candy had no idea why Garth was suddenly so agreeable, but she wasn?t about to look a gift horse in the mouth. Besides, her instructors in school had never been so ruggedly handsome as this wrangler?and she wouldn?t mind engaging in some horseplay! ?back cover.

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Margaret's verdict

"Cowboy and the princess: Faron Whitelaw had some nerve calling Belinda Prescott a princess. A nearly bankrupt ranch was hardly a castle, and Faron, an ill-tempered cowboy who?d inherited half …"

— Margaret

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