A pleasant Harlequin romance, enjoyable as long as you consider when it was written. The style seems, by today's standards, hopelessly old-fashioned. The characters seem unmatched, mostly because the male MC is a demanding authoritarian figure, while the female MC is unsure, with no self-confidence. I suppose this was commonplace romance in this era (the 1980's), although I had thought we were a little more enlightened at that time. In any case, the romance is sweet. I liked Dale, a young woman raised by nuns until she was 19 and out of school. At that time, she is contacted by a handsome young attorney who advises her that her largely-absentee parents have died and she now has a large inheritance. When she goes to live with him and his mother, she is immediately drawn into their family, and she inevitably falls in love with Rick. When she discovers a secret letter, she realizes that she can't ever marry anyone, and she fights her attraction to him. She's kind, thoughtful, and a talented artist. Rick, for his part, is the typical Neanderthal male lead. He can be tender, but mostly he scowls. I suspect all of that bluster is because he's trying to fight his attraction to his ward, but he still comes across as kind of an ass. Of course, all of their problems would have been resolved with an honest conversation, but that, I suppose, it the case with many romances. The setting of South Africa is a little different, and I found the brief descriptions to be interesting. All in all, a pleasant way to spend a few hours.