![]() ![]() ![]() (She undresses him, after rescuing him and taking him back to her home, in order to tend to a bad wound he has on his leg.) Winter asks her not to unmask him and, after she’s ogled his hard, ridged muscled body and his “cock thick and long, even at rest, his bollocks heavy,” flirted with him, and had him reject her advances, she sews up his leg and lets him escape. Winter is the dull, rather infuriating man who runs the Home of which she is a major Patroness. Isabel is well-acquainted with Winter Makepeace but has no idea, even after she takes off every inch of his clothes (except for a thin black scarf covering the top half of his head) that he’s the Ghost of St. Thief of Shadows is the tale of their decidedly implausible love. One night, after freeing the pirate Mickey (hero of Scandalous Desires), Winter is fighting an angry mob for his life when he is suddenly rescued by Lady Isabel Beckinhall. At night, however, Winter dons a harlequin’s costume and patrols the roads and roofs of the slums, saving innocents from all matter of evil. ![]() The hero of this book, Winter Makepeace, is by day a grave, severe man soberly devoted to running the Home. Three of the books, including this one, feature siblings who run the Home for Unfortunate Infants and Foundling Children in the London slum of St. Thief of Shadows is the fourth book in Ms. ![]()
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