Their Soiled Dove
181 pages
English

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181 pages
English
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Description

<p><strong>When she decided to auction her virginity to the highest bidder, she never dreamed it would be purchased by two handsome cowboys. </strong></p>
<p>After losing her family and her home to a devastating fire, Faith MacGregor is forced to go to work in a brothel in order to save her younger sister. She thinks that she's prepared to become a soiled dove. But when two handsome brothers win the right to claim her virginity and her body for an entire week, she learns things about herself that she never imagined were possible.</p>
<p>Eric McKenzie isn't looking for love, and he doesn't expect to ever find a wife. He's always shared women with his brother, and he's content using the services of experienced whores. After all, no decent woman would consent to being dominated or shared by two sexual sadists. But when he lays eyes on Faith while she's being auctioned to the highest bidder, he knows that he's found the one woman he wants to keep for his own. He's determined to win her, no matter the cost.</p>
<p>The two brothers use pain and pleasure to teach Faith all about dominance and submission. But with her innocence and courage, she teaches them about love. Eric soon realizes that if he wants to capture her heart, he'll have to make the hardest choice he's ever faced.</p>
<p>Publisher's Note: This steamy, historical m&eacute;nage contains a theme of power exchange.</p>
<p><strong>&nbsp;</strong></p>

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 05 juin 2020
Nombre de lectures 6
EAN13 9781645632979
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0000€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Their Soiled Dove
Return to the McKenzies - Book Three


Lynn Coppersmith
Published by Blushing Books
An Imprint of
ABCD Graphics and Design, Inc.
A Virginia Corporation
977 Seminole Trail #233
Charlottesville, VA 22901

©2020
All rights reserved.

No part of the book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The trademark Blushing Books is pending in the US Patent and Trademark Office.

Lynn Coppersmith
Their Soiled Dove

EBook ISBN: 978-1-64563-297-9
print ISBN: 978-1-64563-321-1
audio ISBN: 978-1-64563-322-8
v1

Cover Art by ABCD Graphics & Design
This book contains fantasy themes appropriate for mature readers only. Nothing in this book should be interpreted as Blushing Books' or the author's advocating any non-consensual sexual activity.
Contents



Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Epilogue


Lynn Coppersmith

Blushing Books

Blushing Books Newsletter
Chapter 1

San Francisco, California, Summer 1879
"H ow are we ever going to raise another two hundred dollars? This is absolutely hopeless! We're never getting out of here. We'll still be working as laundresses when we're old and grey!"
"Stop crying," Faith MacGregor scolded her younger sister. "It's not going to help our situation, and you're just going to make your eyes all puffy and red."
Hope MacGregor turned tear-filled eyes up to meet her sister's stern ones. "I don't understand how you can always remain so strong in the face of adversity. Don't you ever just feel the need to cry, Faith?"
"Of course, I do, nearly every day, but I don't have the luxury. When our world came crashing down, at least one of us had to be strong."
Faith had spoken more harshly than she intended, and her sister's shoulders shook with fresh sobs. With a remorseful sigh, Faith pulled her in for a hug. She could never bear to see Hope cry. Lately, her sister had been crying more than ever. In fact, that's all she'd seemed to do for the past month. She had also stopped eating or showing any interest in life. Faith did her best to coax her to eat and to bolster her spirits, but it was difficult when they both knew their situation was grim. Faith was getting really worried about her sister, both emotionally and physically. She didn't know how much longer Hope could carry on unless their situation improved.
Faith sighed heavily. "I'm sorry, sweetheart. I didn't mean to snap at you. Please don't cry. Everything is going to be fine; I promise. We just have to put our heads together and we can figure something out. Now, dry your tears and pull yourself together."
Faith waited patiently while her sister dabbed her face with her lacy handkerchief. Although Faith was putting on a brave face, she really had no idea how they were going to solve their problems. She simply had to find some way to raise another two hundred dollars to help her sister pursue her dream of becoming a schoolteacher. Surely, if Hope could get out of this awful city, her spirits would improve.
It was hard to believe that just a year earlier, their lives had been almost perfect. Their father had been an extremely talented and successful horse breeder, and he had owned a profitable ranch near Wilbur Springs, California. They had grown up in the comfortable house their father had built on the thousand-acre ranch. They had wanted for nothing, and the most difficult problem Faith had faced was how to discourage the dozens of suitors who were determined to marry her.
She refused to marry one of the handsome but weak-willed men who swarmed around her. She didn't find them the least bit attractive. If she were going to give herself to a man, he would have to show some backbone. In fact, it would take a man with a stronger will than her own to wrestle her to the altar. While Faith professed not to be interested in marriage at all, she secretly wished that the right man would come along and steal her heart. Her parents shared a deep and abiding love, and she wanted the same for herself. But none of her suitors had even sparked an interest, and she had all but given up on the idea of marriage.
While the two sisters were exceptionally close, their personalities and looks could not have been more different from each other. Faith resembled their father, with her fiery red hair and sparkling green eyes. She also shared his obsession with horses. She wanted to follow in his footsteps, and she had a natural talent for breeding and training horses.
Her father doted on her, and he'd bragged that she knew more about horses than any man. Faith planned to run their ranch some day, and her father understood and encouraged her passion. He had no intention of leaving her to run the ranch without the help of a strong husband, but unlike most fathers, he didn't pressure her to get married. He figured that she would eventually meet someone who wanted to capture her heart without breaking her independent spirit. After all, she was the most beautiful girl in all of California. Sooner or later, she was bound to attract just the right man who would be strong enough to tame some of her wildness while supporting and protecting her.
Her sister, on the other hand, closely resembled their mother in both looks and temperament. Hope had a sweet, docile disposition to go with her serene, dark beauty. Her hair was as black as a raven's wing, and her eyes were like deep blue pools. Hope wanted to follow in her mother's footsteps by becoming a schoolteacher.
Their mother, Ellen, had grown up in Philadelphia, and she had moved out to California when she was barely eighteen to pursue her dream of teaching. She had met Alan MacGregor by chance, on the first day she arrived in San Francisco. The two had fallen madly in love, and they married barely two weeks later. Ellen had never spent a day teaching school, but she did use her knowledge to teach her two daughters.
Hope was determined to actually become a teacher, and she had been making plans to travel back east to get her teaching diploma. Their mother's sister was the headmistress at a school for teachers, and she had offered free tuition as well as free room and board for her niece. Hope had been looking forward to living in Philadelphia and getting to know her only aunt during the year it would take her to earn her teacher's diploma.
However, neither of the girls had known that their dreams were destined to be shattered in a sudden and tragic way. After a particularly dry summer, a lightning strike had ignited a terrible fire on their ranch. As luck would have it, the two sisters had been attending the annual autumn ball in town when disaster struck. By the time they learned of the fire and were able to make it out to their ranch, everything had been destroyed. Both of their parents and several of the ranch hands had died in the fire. The ranch house, the barns, and paddocks, and nearly all of their horses were gone.
Although they were devastated, Faith had been determined to rebuild their ranch. It had come as an incredible shock to learn that there was no money for the two orphaned girls. Unbeknownst to them, their father had mortgaged the ranch so that he could purchase some expensive new stallions and mares from Kentucky. He had planned to become the most successful breeder of racehorses on the west coast. If he had realized his ambitions, he would have been able to repay the loan within just a few years. Instead, all of the new horses were killed in the fire. The bank foreclosed, and the two sisters were left orphaned, homeless, and penniless. They were left with the clothes on their backs and just a few dollars between them.
Their aunt in Philadelphia was their only remaining relative. She didn't own the school for teachers, she merely ran it. She couldn't afford to send them the money to come, but she wrote to them saying that if they could pay for their train fare to Philadelphia, she would take them both in. Although Faith had no interest in becoming a teacher, she figured she could find work in the big city. But first, they had to raise the money for the tickets.
The heartbroken sisters traveled to San Francisco because there were no opportunities for them in their hometown. They rented a room in a boarding house run by an elderly widow, Mrs. Edmonds. The old woman took pity on the two and charged them a reduced rate for their room and board in exchange for their help with chores. She also told them about a man, Mr. Grieg, who could offer the girls jobs as laundresses.
They had been working at the laundry for over a year, but their wages were low, and the cost of living in the city was high. They'd had to use some of their earnings just to purchase some secondhand clothes and necessities. Between the two of them, they had only managed to save fifty dollars in a year's time. They needed to raise at least two hundred dollars just to be able to send Hope to Philadelphia, and that would mean Faith had to stay behind in San Francisco. The train ticket would cost nearly two hundred dollars, but because their aunt could offer free tuition, room, and

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