The final book in the Smythe-Smiths Quartet a dazzlingly witty series by the bestselling
author of Bridgerton. Sir Richard Kenworthy has less than a month to find a bride . . . He
knows he can't be too picky but when he sees Iris Smythe-Smith hiding behind her cello at her
family's infamous musicale he thinks he might have struck gold. She's the type of girl you
don't notice until the second-or third-look but there's something about her something
simmering under the surface and he knows she's the one. Iris Smythe-Smith is used to being
underestimated. With her pale hair and quiet sly wit she tends to blend into the background
and she likes it that way. So when Richard Kenworthy demands an introduction she is
suspicious. He flirts he charms he gives every impression of a man falling in love but she
can't quite believe it's all true. When when he proposes she feels certain that he's hiding
something . . . even as her heart tells her to say yes. 'Light pacy and full of feisty
heroines' Guardian on the Bridgerton series [thumbnails Just Like Heaven and Sum of All Kisses]