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The Lady is a Thief
Years ago, Owen Renderwell earned acclaim-and a title-for the dashing rescue of a kidnapped duchess. But only a select few knew that Scotland Yard's most famous detective was working alongside London's most infamous thief...and his criminally brilliant daughter, Charlotte Walker.
Lottie was like no other woman in Victorian England. She challenged him. She dazzled him. She questioned everything he believed and everything he was, and he has never wanted anyone more. And then he lost her.
Now a private detective on the trail of a murderer, Owen has stormed back into Lottie's life. She knows that no matter what they may pretend, he will always be a man of the law and she a criminal. Yet whenever he's near, Owen has a way of making things complicated...and long for a future that can never be theirs.
374 pages, Kindle Edition
First published November 3, 2015

Gabriel stepped forward from the windows. “Certain you don’t know it?”
She looked up. “Yes.”
“Why should we believe you?”
“Still the thickest of the three, aren’t you?” She glanced at Owen. “Why ever have you kept him around so long?”
Owen shrugged lightly. “He’s a good shot.”
..."This family became respectable three weeks after my fifteenth birthday. Just like --" she lightly jabbed the tip of the knife into the armrest -- "that, and we were all good children of the God-fearing Mr. Bales, successful tradesman. At fourteen we were criminals and at fifteen we were not. Do you know how much changed for me then?"
"How much?"
"Not a damn thing."
- loc 2794 to 2806
If parents had a queen, he mused, she would enter a room like Miss Charlotte Walker-Bales.
- loc 58
"My father used to say morality was a currency. The very poor sell it off quickly because it is the only thing of value they possess, and the very rich spend it frivolously because they've other commodities with which to replace its value."
- loc 1020