Rachel and the Hired Gun
by:
Elaine Levine (author)
When Rachel Douglas left her aunt's house in Virginia for the wilds of the Dakota territory, she knew the journey would be long and arduous. But she didn't realize that she has been summoned west to be used as a pawn in a ranch war with her father's neighbor - or that her fierce, sudden...
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When Rachel Douglas left her aunt's house in Virginia for the wilds of the Dakota territory, she knew the journey would be long and arduous. But she didn't realize that she has been summoned west to be used as a pawn in a ranch war with her father's neighbor - or that her fierce, sudden attraction to Sager, her father's hired gun, would put her heart and her life in jeopardy.Seducing Rachel and feeding a bitter feud between the two ranches was Sager's plan of vengeance against those who slaughtered his foster Shoshone family. Instead, Rachel's guileless mix of courage and vulnerability touches the conscience he thought he'd buried long ago, and draws them both into a passion without rules, without limits - one that will change their destinies forever...
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Format: mass market paperback
ISBN:
9781420105513 (1420105515)
ASIN: 1420105515
Publish date: January 1st 2009
Publisher: Zebra
Pages no: 341
Edition language: English
Series: Men of Defiance (#1)
I enjoyed this western historical romance. Rachel is a tough gal with a heart. Sage is a very angry wanderer who never felt like he belonged. I liked that this book started on a wagon train and eventually led to the little town of Defiance. I would have liked to read more about the hardships of livi...
Rachel's father Old Jack, sends a hired gun, Sager to fetch his daughter who has left Virginia with a wagon train heading to the Dakota territory. Sager came upon Rachel and a wolf about to attack her as he was trying to save a little girl. He arrived in time to save both. He stayed a bit on the...
I think I would have liked this better if I hadn't read an almost identical plot line years ago. The constant sense of deja vu was distracting (especially since I can't remember the title of the similar book)