Book 9

The Marriage Conspiracy

by Christine Rimmer

Published 1 October 2001
Hardworking detective Dekker Smith had always been Joleen Tilly's best friend. But then Joleen fell for a rich boy's honeyed lies, producing precious little Sam. When Sam's powerful grandparents demanded custody, Dekker proposed an astonishing solution: a convenient marriage! For Dekker had discovered he was wealthy enough to fend off any claims on Sam. P>Silhouette Romance - Special Edition

The Nine-month Marriage

by Christine Rimmer

Published 25 October 1998
In Abby Heller's hero-worshipping eyes, Cash Bravo could do no wrong. But one urgent April night, Cash made a woman of Abby ... and Abby became pregnant. Cash cursed himself for stealing her innocence and vowed to give their baby his name. Then he'd set sweet Abby free -- to find herself a better mate. After all, when a man loved a woman, heartache was nothing ... but honor was all.

Practically Married

by Christine Rimmer

Published 19 March 1999

The Bravo Billionaire

by Christine Rimmer

Published 6 July 2002
Hiding behind a facade of wealth and success, Jonas Bravo is tormented by the loss of his baby brother years ago until baby Mandy comes into his life, and determined to get custody of the precious child, Jonas enters into a temporary marriage with Mandy's guardian, Emma Hewitt, who gives him the courage to love again. Original.

Married By Accident

by Christine Rimmer

Published 21 January 2000

Marriage By Necessity

by Christine Rimmer

Published December 1998
A ring and a baby . . .To fulfill her father's will and keep her precious ranch, Megan Kane needed to marry and bear a child. Since she'd always loved handsome neighbor Nate Brave -- a rogue she couldn't tie down -- her solution was simple. She'd beg Nate to wed her and bed her . . .And then she'd set him freeMeggie vowed she wouldn't cling. Wouldn't linger. She'd cherish her marriage until she got pregnant. Then she'd raise Nate's baby lovingly . . . along. But all too soon Meggie swelled with child. And she learned some promises were hell to keep . . .