Rich Manning and Jamie Warren have always been friends--and nothing but friends. However, that changes when she asks him to father the child she so desperately wants. Rich agrees--*if* she'll marry him. Because he thinks their *Marriage of Inconvenience* could become a real marriage instead.
Marriage of Inconvenience
โ Scribed by Macomber, Debbie
- Book ID
- 108377136
- Publisher
- MIRA
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 125 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781459239029
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Rich Manning and Jamie Warren have always been friends--and nothing but friends. However, that changes when she asks him to father the child she so desperately wants. Rich agrees--if she'll marry him. Because he thinks their Marriage of Inconvenience could become a real marriage instead.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Proposing to the Earl of Aynsley seems a sensible - if unconventional - solution to Miss Rebecca Peabody's predicament. As a married woman, she will be free to writing her essays on civil reform. Meanwhile, the distinguished widower will gain a stepmother for his seven children and a caretaker for h
Proposing to the Earl of Aynsley seems a sensible - if unconventional - solution to Miss Rebecca Peabody's predicament. As a married woman, she will be free to writing her essays on civil reform. Meanwhile, the distinguished widower will gain a stepmother for his seven children and a caretaker for h
Rich Manning and Jamie Warren have always been friends--and nothing but friends. However, that changes when she asks him to father the child she so desperately wants. Rich agrees--*if* she'll marry him. Because he thinks their *Marriage of Inconvenience* could become a real marriage instead.
Rich Manning and Jamie Warren have always been friends--and nothing but friends. However, that changes when she asks him to father the child she so desperately wants. Rich agrees--*if* she'll marry him. Because he thinks their *Marriage of Inconvenience* could become a real marriage instead.
Proposing to the Earl of Aynsley seems a sensible - if unconventional - solution to Miss Rebecca Peabody's predicament. As a married woman, she will be free to writing her essays on civil reform. Meanwhile, the distinguished widower will gain a stepmother for his seven children and a caretaker for h