An Angels & Outlaws Historical Romance
3 primary works
Book 1
All Tyrell Fannin and his cousins Isaac and Micah Burnet want is to get out of a Texas jail and go home to Mississippi.
Delia Lavalle didn’t need three outlaws to escort her and her sisters to Louisiana but she doesn’t really have a choice.
The outlaws aren’t happy about escorting nuns, but figure they might bring them luck, because not even Santa Anna would harm a holy woman. A week into the trip, however, the outlaws find that the nuns are sisters—but not of the cloth—and that their tempers would make an angel’s wings shrivel up and fall off.
Tyrell is determined to finish his job and forget all about Delia’s piercing blue eyes, that tumble of black hair, and her hot temper. Delia can’t wait to be away from Tyrell’s constant judgment, but along the way she finds herself drawn to him.
Will they get what they want—safe travels home—or will fate intervene and bring them something altogether different?
Book 2
Isaac Burnet didn’t want to go to Louisiana to deliver the letter from Delia to her sister Fairlee, but he did. He sure didn’t want to be party to kidnapping the sassy, spirited lass on the eve of her wedding, or journey two weeks with a woman who didn’t like him, but he did.
Fairlee Lavalle was determined to marry Matthew Cheval no matter what her sisters, aunt, or uncle thought. She had all the adventure she wanted the spring before when her father hired three outlaws to bring her and her two sisters, Delia and Tempest, home from Texas. She would marry Matthew and they would be happy.
She continued to believe that he would love her right up until she was drugged and kidnapped by one of those outlaws who’d escorted them home. And to think it was with her sister’s help.
During the two-week journey, their hearts begin to see qualities they both like in the other. Will they ever admit it or will their stubbornness keep them apart forever?
Book 3
Angels would have trouble getting along with Micah Burnet, and Tempest Lavalle’s halo is twisted plumb out of shape by the time she gets to the plantation where her two married sisters are living. Micah was the handsomest of the three outlaws who escorted her and her sisters from San Antonio to Louisiana but he also has the biggest ego. Add that to Tempie’s fiery temper, and the two could burn down the whole western half of Mississippi.
Micah isn’t happy about Tempie coming to the plantation, but it’s a big place and he can stay out of her way…right? Wrong! He and Tempie are drawn together the minute he shares a deathbed confession with her. He knows that little apparition appearing over her head when she’s being nice is darn sure not a halo but just a trick of the light, so why does fate keep throwing them together?